West Oregon Lumber Co.Download PDFNational Labor Relations Board - Board DecisionsFeb 1, 194020 N.L.R.B. 1 (N.L.R.B. 1940) Copy Citation In the Matter of WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY and LUMBER AND SAWMILL WORKERS LOCAL UNION No. 3, INTERNATIONAL WOOD- WORKERS OF AMERICA In the Matter of WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY and LUMBER AND SAWMILL WORKERS UNION , LOCAL No. 2532 , CHARTERED BY THE UNITED BROTHERHOOD OF CARPENTERS AND JOINERS OF AMERICA Cases Nos. C-963 and R-1014, respectively.Decided February 1, 1940 Dimber Industry-Interference, Restraint , and Coercion :. assistance of one union to the disadvantage of rival union through statements , temporary plant stoppage, solicitation by supervisory employees , circulation of petition in plant,, threat of shut-down, and shut-down-Discrimination: as to tenure of employ-- ment : lock-out ; upon reopening of plant discharges , refusals to reinstate, andi delayed reinstatements because of union membership and activity to discourage- membership in one union and encourage membership in rival union-Unit Appro-- pri.ctte for Collective Bargaining: all plant and production employees, including: foremen, but excluding' office employees and supervisory employees above the. rank of foremen-Representatives: proof of choice : prior certification ; pledge- cards checked against pay roll-Collective Bargaining: employer 's attempt to destroy union majority and thus eliminate obligation to bargain ; refusal to meet with collective bargaining representative ; execution of closed-shop contract with labor organization other than the collective bargaining representative- Remedy: usual cease and desist order ; company ordered to bargain with collec- tive bargaining representatives; company ordered not to bargain with certain- labor organization unless and until certified by Board-Reinstatement: ordered- Back Pay: awarded-Investigation of Representatives : petition for, dismissed in view of order to bargain. Mr. Thomas P. Graham,, Jr., and Mr. G. L. Patterson, for the Board.. McCamant, Thompson, King d" Wood, by Mr. Grant T. Anderson,. of Portland; Oreg.; for the respondent. Mr. Fred Jensen, of Portland, Oreg., and Mr. L. Presley Gill, of Seattle, Wash., for Local No. 2532. Houghton, Cluck d Coughlin,, by Mr. Paul Coughlin, of Seattle, Wash., for Local No. 3. Mr. Aaron .8ewittes, of counsel to the Board. 20 N. L . R. B., No. 1. 1 2 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD DECISION AND ORDER STATEMENT OF THE CASE Upon charges and amended charges duly filed by Lumber & Saw- mill Workers Local Union No. 3, herein called Local No. 3, the National Labor Relations Board,; herein called the Board, by the Regional Director for the Nineteenth Region (Seattle, Washington), issued and duly served its complaint, dated May 16,1938, against West Oregon Lumber. Company, Linnton, Oregon, herein called the respondent, alleging that the respondent had engaged in and was engaging in unfair labor practices affecting commerce, within the meaning of Section 8 (1) and (3) and Section 2 (6) and. (7) of the National Labor Relations Act, 49 Stat. 449, herein called the Act. The complaint alleged in substance that (a) on and after February 8, 1938,'the respondent, by plant shut-downs, solicitation, and threats, coerced its employees into abandoning Local No. 3 and into joining Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union, Local No. 2532, herein called Local No. 2532; (b) on and after April 11, 1938, the respondent dis- charged and refused to reinstate 73 employees because they were mem- bers of Local No. 3 and refused to become members of Local No. 2532; and. (c) by these and other acts, the respondent interfered with, re- strained, and coerced its employees in the exercise of their right to self-organization. The respondent filed an answer dated May 20, 1938, denying that it had engaged in the alleged unfair labor practices. Pursuant to notice, the hearing- opened in Portland, Oregon, on May 26, 1938, before Martin Ralphael, the Trial Examiner duly desig- nated by the Board. On the first day of 'the hearing, the Trial Examiner granted the motion of Local No. 2532 to intervene. On June 6, 1937, Local No. 2532 filed .with the Regional Director a. petition alleging thata`.qukstion affecting. commerce had.- ariseir.concerning' -the representation of employees of the respondent, and. requesting an in- vestigation and certification 'of ' representatives, pursuant to Section 9 (c) of the Act. On June 13 the Trial Examiner permitted the.. complaint to. be :amended. The complaint, as amended, alleged in addition to the above- mentioned unfair labor practices that on and after December 15, 1937, the respondent committed an unfair labor practice affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 8 (1) and (5) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act by refusing to negotiate in good faith, or with the intention .of reaching an agreement, with Local No. 3, the duly designated exclusive collective bargaining representative of employees of the WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 3 respondent in an appropriate unit. The respondent was permitted to file an amended answer in which the respondent denied that it com- 'initted the unfair labor practices alleged in the amended complaint. The hearing closed on June 30, 1938. Upon further amended charges duly filed by Local No. 3, the Board, by the Regional Director, issued and duly served its sup- plemental complaint dated August 23, 1938, against the respondent. The supplemental complaint repeated the allegations of the com- plaint and amended complaint and, in addition, alleged that the respondent committed an unfair labor practice affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 8 (1) and (5) and Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act, by entering into a contract with Local No. 2532 providing for exclusive representation by Local No. 2532 and for membership in Local No. 2532 as a condition of employment. On August 26, 1938, the Board, acting pursuant to Section 9 (c) of the Act and Article' III, Section 3, of National Labor Relations Board Rules and Regulations-Series 1, as amended, ordered an investigation of the petition filed by Local No. 2532 and authorized the Regional Director to conduct it and to provide for an appro- 'priate hearing upon due notice. On August 26, 1938, the Board, acting pursuant to Article III, Section 10 (c) (2), and Article II, Section 37 (b), of National Labor Relations Board Rules and Regulations-Series 1, as amended, ordered that the complaint and representation cases be consolidated for the purpose of hearing. On August 30 the respondent filed an answer to the supplemental complaint, admitting the execution of the contract with Local No. 2532, but denying that it had engaged in or was engaging in the alleged unfair labor practices. Pursuant to notice, the supplemental hearing opened in Port- land, Oregon, on September 1, .1938, before the same Trial Exam- iner, duly designated by the Board. On September 1, 1938, the Trial Examiner granted the motion of Local No. 2532 to intervene. The hearing closed on September 2, 1938. The Board, the respondent, ,and Local No. 2532 were represented by counsel and participated in both hearings. Local No. 3 was represented by counsel and par- ticipated in the second hearing. Full opportunity to be heard; to .examine and cross-examine witnesses, and tp introduce evidence bearing on the issues was afforded all parties at both hearings. During the course of the hearings the Trial Examiner made several rulings on motions and on objections to the admission of evidence. The Board has reviewed the rulings of the Trial Examiner and finds that no prejudicial errors were committed. The rulings are hereby affirmed. - . . •.. 4 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD On October 11, 1938, the Board, acting pursuant to Article II, Section 37, of National Labor Relations Board Rules and Regula- tions-Series 1, as amended, ordered the proceedings in the case transferred to and continued before the Board for action pursuant to Article II, Section 38, of said Rules and Regulations, directing that no Intermediate Report be issued, that Proposed Findings of Fact, Proposed Conclusions of Law, and Proposed Order be issued, and that the parties herein shall have the right, within ten (10) days from the receipt of the Proposed Findings, to file exceptions, to request oral argument before the Board, and to request permission to file a brief with the Board. On September 8, 1939, the Board issued and served upon all the parties its Proposed Findings of Fact, Proposed Conclusions of Law, and Proposed Order. Thereafter the respondent and Local No. 2532 filed exceptions to the proposed findings and briefs in sup- port of their exceptions, and Local No. 3 filed a brief in support of the proposed findings. The respondent, in its exceptions, requests an opportunity to prove that certain employees included in our proposed order of reinstate- ment have already been reinstated. The matter to be proved under this request, if true, does not warrant reopening the record, thereby postponing our order. The respondent, in its exceptions, requests an opportunity to prove that certain employees included in our pro- posed order of reinstatement have not been reinstated "because of intoxication and incompetence." The respondent has not shown specifically what evidence it would offer if this request were granted, nor has the respondent shown why it did not offer this evidence at the hearing and supplementary hearing held in this case. The re- quests to offer further proof are hereby denied. The Board has considered the exceptions and briefs, and, save as the exceptions are consistent with the findings, conclusions, and order set forth below, finds them to be without merit. . Upon the entire record in the case, the Board makes the following: FINDINGS OF FACT 1. THE BUSINESS OF THE RESPONDENT The respondent, West Oregon Lumber Company, is an Oregon cor- poration, engaged in the manufacture and sale of lumber and wood products. Its plant is located in Linnton, Oregon, on the Willamette River. The respondent normally employs; between 300 and 355 per-. sons. Its annual sales exceed $1,000,000. Five per cent of the logs purchased come from outside the State of Oregon. It ships 90 per cent of its manufactured products to States other than Oregon. WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 5 II. THE ORGANIZATIONS INVOLVED Lumber and Sawmill Workers Local Union No. 3 is a labor organi- zation, which is chartered by the Interna ,tiona.l Woodworkers of America, herein called the I. W. A., which in turn is affiliated with the Committee for Industrial Organization ,' herein called the C. I. O. Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union, Local No. 2532 ,_ is a labor organization -which is..chartered by, the. United Brotherhood of Car- penters and Joiners of America, herein called the Carpenters, which in turn is affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, herein called the A. F. of L. Each of the two locals admits to membership the respondent's plant and production workers, excluding office and supervisory employees above the rank of foremen. Prior to the - summer of 1937 the plant and production employees of the respondent were organized in Local No. 2532. In the summer of 1937 the membership of Local No . 2532 voted to apply for a charter from the I . W. A., the charter was installed and the employees theretofore members of Local No. 2532 became members of Local No. 3.2 Thereafter the Carpenters sought to regain its position among the respondent's employees through a revived Local No. 2532. The present cases do not raise any issues requiring a determination as to whether Local No. 2532 is a continuation of the first Local No. 2532 or whether it is a new labor organization . Accordingly we need not decide this question. III. THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES A. The background The.complaint alleges. that the respondent, engaged in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (1), (3), and (5) of the Act. The respondent is charged with refusing to bargain with Local No. 3 and with compelling its employees, by interference, restraint, coercion, and discrimination, to reafiliate with Local No. 2532. The Carpenters placed pressure on the respondent which was cal- culated to induce the respondent to engage in the aforesaid unfair 1 Now called Congress of Industrial Organizations. 2 See Matters of Jones Lumber Company, West Oregon Lumber Company , Clark 'and WiltbnCLismber . Com pang, $ :.F. JohnsonfLu .mber,Compang. Portland . Lumber.. Mills,'Inmdn'' Paulsen Lumber Company and Eastern and Western Lumber Company ' and Columbia. River District Council of Lambe?- and Sarom. ill Workers' Union No. 5, etc ., et al., 3 N. L. R. B. 855: Matters of Jones Lumber Company. B. F. Johnson Lumber Company , Portland Lumber Mills and Eastern Western Lumber Company and Lumber and Sawn, ill Workert, Union, etc., 12 N. L. R. B. 209. 283031-41-vol. 20--2 (j . DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD labor practices . Beginning with August 1937 , the Carpenters in- stituted a boycott against the respondent 's products . At first the boycott activity was concentrated mainly in Portland and Los Angeles. This phase of the boycott proved troublesome although it did not substantially "harm" the respondent . Between January and April 1938, however , the Carpenters imposed a boycott in San Francisco which did substantially affect the respondent 's ability to market its lumber in that area. The respondent made several efforts to secure the elimination of the boycott, including appeals for assistance to United States Senator Steiwer, to the Federal Trade Commission , to the , United States District Attorney , to officials of Local No . 3, to the West Coast Lumbermen's Association, and to an organization known as the Committee of 43. The record compels the conclusion that the re- spondent in pursuing its efforts to obtain the removal of the boycott also resorted to acts infringing rights guaranteed in the Act. B. Interference , restraint , coercion, and discrimination 1. The stoppage of February 8, 1938 On or about February 8, 1938, Local No. 2532 engaged in a. mem- bership drive among the respondent's employees. The events im- mediately preceding this campaign are as follows : At the beginning of February employees of the neighboring Jones Lumber Company abandoned the I. W. A. and reaffiliated with the Carpenters. On February 2 A. W. Muir, identified as an official of the Carpenters, sent a telegram to A. E. McIntosh , president and manager of the respondent ; suggesting that McIntosh and his employees "should follow the lead of the employees in the Jones Lumber Co.," and warning that "we are watching the Stanwood." 3 On February 7 the respondent posted on thq plant bulletin board a notice which stated that the respondent was "out of business" in California "until the boycott is lifted " and which announced "an indefinite shut-down' effective after Wednesday, February 9." The evidence shows that this membership drive of Local No. 2532 was conducted with the assistance of the respondent 's supervisory employees. At this time Hisakichi Koike was in charge of the Japanese crew of both the day and night shifts and he had authority to hire and discharge persons working 'on this crew. Frank Onishi, who was in charge of. the Japanese crew on the night shift under Koike, also had authority to hire and discharge. During the lunch period of 3 The Stanwood hauled respondent's lumber from Portland to San Francisco. WEST OREGON LUMBER'COMPANY 7 the night shift Koike gave Onishi a batch of Local No. 2532 applica- tion cards and told him "to sign" the men "up." After work re- sumed, between the hours of 9: 00 p. in. and 2: 00 a. in., Onishi solicited the employees in his charge and procured their signatures to the membership application cards. On February 8 George March was the respondent's head sawyer. March was not a foreman and he did not have any authority to hire and discharge. He was in charge of the head-rig, however, a ma- chine upon whose operation the whole sawmill department depends. During the day-shift lunch period on February 8 March and other employees began to solicit fellow employees to join Local No. 2532. At 12: 00 noon, the close of the lunch period, March continued to solicit memberships for Local No. 2532 instead of returning to work. The consequent stoppage of the head-rig and of the other machines in the sawmill department continued for 11/2 hours and during this time March and other persons carried on an active mem- bership campaign on behalf of Local No. 2532. March informed the employees that because of the boycott the plant could not remain open unless they reaffiliated with Local No. 2532. Although Plant Superintendent Wilkinson was present through- out the period of the stoppage and fully aware of what was occur- ring, he made no effort to restart the sawmill department or to forbid solicitation during regular working hours on company property or otherwise to disassociate the respondent from the membership cam- paign of Local No. 2532. Wilkinson did not testify. About 1: 00 p. in. the plant committee of Local No. 3 succeeded in locating A. E. McIntosh and his son Kenneth, who was secretary- 'treasurer and assistant manager of the respondent, and requested them to return to the plant. Upon their arrival at the plant at about 1:20 p. m. A. E. and Kenneth McIntosh found that the saw- mill department was not in operation. A group of employees and some representatives of the I. W. A. had congregated near the time .office and when A. E. and Kenneth McIntosh appeared they became 'involved- in a discussion with persons in the assembled group. In the course of this discussion the Mclntoshes stated, inter alia, that -they had not instigated the stoppage, that they could not operate -the plant while the boycott continued, and that they did not care .whether the employees were members of the A. F. of L. or of the C. I. O. so long as the boycott was eliminated. A. E. McIntosh also ,made the following remark to the assemblage: "I don't give a damn _how it's done, but this boycott has to be lifted." Thereafter the Mclntoshes.instructed March and the other saw- ,mill . employees to return to their machines.. The sawmill depart- ment resumed work about 1: 30 p. m. 8 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD During the discussion outside the time office , hereinabove men- tioned, A. E. McIntosh had stated that he would discipline March if an investigation showed that March was at fault in connection with the stoppage . Subsequently Kenneth reprimanded March and criticized Wilkinson. It does not appear, however, that the respond- ent notified the employees thereof or that the respondent , by other measures , effectively disassociated itself in the minds of the em- ployees from the actions of Marcli~and Wilkinson: 2. The shut-down commencing March 18, 1938 Although many employees signed cards applying for member- ship in Local No. 2532 as the result of its membership campaign on and about February 8, 1938, Local No. 2532 did not procure a ma- jority at that time . Consequently the Carpenters continued the boycott. The plant, accordingly, closed on February 9, 1938. There- after the plant reopened for 4 days toward the end of February. The plant operated again between March 7 and March 18, 1938, remaining closed thereafter until April 7, 1938. We now turn to the alleged unfair labor practices occurring in connection with this shut-down commencing March 18. At the time the plant reopened in MMlarch, Kenneth McIntosh warned the plant committee of Local No. 3 "that the situation was becoming impossible in San Francisco ." On March 11 or March 15, Kenneth McIntosh conferred with the representatives of Local No. 3 with respect to the Carpenters ' boycott, measures taken by Local No. 3 to defeat the boycott, and the plant's prospects for re- maining open . Kenneth McIntosh testified , and we find , that he made the following statement in the course of this conference : That, privately and among gentlemen , my own opinion was that it would be impossible for a C. 'I. O. union, or its affiliates, by means of bringing pressure by counteraction or retaliatory boycotts to enforce a lifting of this boycott in San Francisco. I stated to them at that time that I feared that the only way the West Oregon Lumber Company market would be opened to the West Oregon Lumber Company in San Francisco would be if at some future time the employees of the West Oregon Lumber. Company could, in sufficient number , reaffiliate with the A. F. of L. The "future time " referred to.in this statement , could only mean the very near future; since Kenneth McIntosh also informed the rep- resentatives of Local No . 3 at this conference that "the situation was rapidly coming to a point where this boycott business in San WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 9 Francisco was spelling financial ruin and disaster for the West Oregon Lumber Company; that something would have to be done very shortly," and the representatives stated that they realized the seriousness of the situation. Thus Kenneth McIntosh made clear to the employees the respondent's asserted belief that their reaf- filiation with Local No. 2532, as_ the only method of ending the boycott, would have to be brought about very shortly if the respond- ent was not to be ruined by the boycott. In so doing he made clear to the employees that the respondent wished them to reaffiliate with Local No. 2532. Kenneth McIntosh testified further that he did not declare at this conference that the respondent intended to urge its employees to change their union affiliation. Although Kenneth McIntosh may not have made such declaration in so many words, nevertheless he did make several statements at this conference which showed that the respondent was in fact determined to force its employees into joining Local No. 2532. These statements appear from credible testimony of George Brown, spokesman for the representatives of Local No. 3 at the conference. Kenneth McIntosh did not deny the substantial truth of this testimony. Thus, according to Brown, he engaged in the following colloquy with Kenneth McIntosh during the discussion with respect to "keeping the mill * in operation and keeping the men on the job": Kenneth McIntosh told us (the representatives of Local No. 3) that if we didn't get this lumber released within a period of a week or ten days that the Company would take steps of their own to effect -a ^ release of this lumber . . . I (George Brown) told him, "I take it you mean you are going to force your men into the A. F. of L.?" Kenneth replied, "We will not force our men into the A. F. of L., we will simply play our cards in such a way that the men will join of their own free will." Obviously, in view of the respondent's declared belief, that only a change in union affiliation would end the boycott, Kenneth McIntosh's statement that the respondent "would take steps of their own" to end the boycott could have only one meaning : the respondent would procure the requisite change in affiliation. The further statement that the respondent would not "force" the employees but would simply "play our cards" so that the employees would "join of their own free will" meant, of course, that the respondent would use subtle means to effectuate its plan of inducing the employees to join Local No. 2532. Kenneth McIntosh stated that one method of getting the employees to affiliate with Local No. 2532 would be to announce a reduction in wages until the boycott ended. 10 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Kenneth McIntosh also asked Brown what measures the respond- ent could take. Substantially the following colloquy followed : And I (George Brown) replied to Kenneth that he was asking me to help him figure out ways and means of, putting his men in the A. F. of L. and that I thought he was smart enough to do that without any help from me. Kenneth said he thought he was too, and that they would take steps if this lumber was not released and I believe that at time he told me, "and I tell you this, George, with the full knowledge you are going to use it against me with the Board some day." At the conference Kenneth McIntosh exhibited to the representa- tives of Local No. 3 a proposed notice to employees which announced a shut-down, attributing it to the boycott, and which placed the problem of ending the boycott in the hands of the employees. Be- cause the proposed notice stated that the problem of eliminating the boycott was the employees' problem, Brown understood the notice to mean that the employees "would have to join the A. F. of L." Brown stated to Kenneth McIntosh that the respondent could force its employees into Local No. 2532 by posting the proposed notice. Kenneth McIntosh agreed that the respondent could. On March 16 or-17 the respondent posted the following letter from A. E. McIntosh : To OuR EMPLOYEES : As matters stand today we cannot continue, in business. The condition of the market is bad enough, but when you add to that a boycott that drives us out of one of our principal dis- tribution points and threatens to drive us out of others, we throw up our hands and howl for help. All the income of the company and a very large cash loss during the past 6 months have gone into your and other workers' pockets. The well is running dry. We can no longer absorb the staggering losses we have sustained. We could have kept our heads above water had you made it possible for us to manufacture, sell, and move our products and by-products freely. . We have placed the facts before your plant committee. They in turn have described the seriousness of this situation to your union officials. Everyone concerned now 'freely admits that a crisis has arisen demanding action now. The whole future of this company depends- upon release from this situation. Yours 'is the problem, yours the solution. Meanwhile we have all our San Francisco lumber tied up, and we are notified that the cargo on the Barbara C, will meet the same fate. This you can take for gospel truth. We don't care a tinker's dam what union you belong to. That has been and still is our WEST OREGON LUMBER • COMPANY 11 attitude. All we want is freedom to do a job of work and. try to make both ends meet. Our present troubles prevent that, and don't forget, whether you like it or not, you will share our troubles and suffer with us if present conditions prevail. Something must be done quickly. Whether you are C. I. 0., A. F. of L., Socialist, Communist, superintendent, foreman,. craftsman, or common laborer, this West Oregon Lumber Com- pany problem is right in your lap. What are you going to do about it? The unmistakable object of this notice was to induce the employees to join Local No. 2532 by warning them that the respondent would close the plant unless they changed their union affiliation. Analysis of.the notice supports this conclusion. The notice first states that the respondent cannot continue in business "as matters stand today," then attributes this inability to the boycott, explains that the respond- ent "could have kept our heads above water" in the absence of the boycott, warns that "the whole future of the company depends upon", the immediate elimination of the boycott, and places the problem of ending the boycott in the "lap" of the employees. Although the notice does not explicitly state that the desired solution of the prob- lem is affiliation with Local No. 2532, such is its clear implica- tion. Also there can be no doubt that the employees grasped this implication. Thus when George Brown read the proposed notice at the conference, hereinabove described, he discovered "that it put the question of-right in the hands of the men as to lifting the boycott." He determined that because the notice placed this problem on the employees it "could only mean one thing, and that was well understood"; namely, "the men would have to join the A. F. of L." Moreover Kenneth McIntosh's announced belief, that the respondent could escape from the boycott only if its employees returned to Local No. 2532, reinforces our conclusion that the purpose of the letter was to make available to the respondent this means of escape. Finally Kenneth McIntosh's other statements at the conference of March 11 or March 15 revealed that a letter to the employees, such as was issued, constituted a part of the respondent's plan to procure the. desired change in the union affiliation of its employees. A. E. McIntosh testified that the object of the posted letter was to prevail upon the employees to compel Local No. 3 to defeat the boy-' cott. In view, however, of the considerations which we have just set forth, we cannot credit this testimony. There are other reasons too why we- cannot accept A. E. McIntosh's explanation. The explana- tion assumes a belief by the respondent at the time it posted the letter that Local No: 3 was able, but unwilling, to nullify the Carpenters' interference with' the respondent's business. Because of the rivalry 12 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD between the two labor organizations and because of the very purpose of the Carpenters ' interference , it is incredible that Local No. 3 was unwilling to combat the Carpenters ' campaign or that the respondent entertained the alleged belief. Indeed Kenneth McIntosh 's statement to the representatives , quoted above, shows that in the respondent's opinion Local No. 3 was unable to eliminate the boycott .. Conse- quently there would be no point in appealing to the employees to prod Local . No. 3 into . action against the boycott. The wording of the letter is also inconsistent with the claim that the respondent believed it necessary to bring pressure on Local No. 3 to induce that organization to take measures against the boycott . Thus the letter acknowleges that "the seriousness of this situation" had been described to the officials of Local No . 3 and that "everyone concerned now freely admits that a crisis has arisen demanding action now." If Local No. 3 "freely"' admitted the need for immediate action, the alleged object of the letter had already been accomplished prior to its publication and the respondent would have no reason for issuing it. We conclude and find that by Kenneth McIntosh 's statements to the representatives of Local No . V3 and by the notice posted on March 16 or 17, the respondent threatened to shut the plant unless the employees joined Local No. 2532 in sufficient number to end the boycott. The contemplated shift in union membership did not take place. Accordingly the respondent closed the plant on March 18, 1938. The respondent informed the employees that the plant was closing indefinitely because of the Carpenters ' boycott. Nevertheless despite the shut-down the bulk of the respondent's employees persisted in retaining their affiliation with Local No. 3 and at the end of March they were still members of that organization . At this point the respondent's supervisory employees undertook to end the boycott by enrolling the employees into Local No. 2532. The respondent paid some supervisory employees by the hour and some by the month. The hourly paid supervisory employees had been laid off with the other employees on March 18 . The respondent, however , did not lay off the monthly paid supervisory employees until March 31. Among , the former . was Paul . Lansberry. Lans- berry was in charge of the millwright department and was classified as head millwright on the respondent 's pay roll . He supervised the employees in his department. He also reported directly to Super- intendent Wilkinson . Lansberry 's recommendation that an employee be discharged carried "some weight" although not as much weight as a similar recommendation from some of the other supervisory employees . Lansberry characterized himself as a foreman, Ken- neth McIntosh testified that Lansberry "approximates " a foreman, WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 13 and. the..record shows that the employees considered Lansberry as a foreman. Among the supervisory employees laid off on March 31 were F. B. Gallagher, Harry Duncan, John Anderson, and Dennis McKay. Each of these persons was a foreman in charge of a depart- ment, supervising the employees in his department. Kenneth McIn- tosh characterized them as "bona fide" foremen. Duncan, Anderson, and McKay had "advisory" power with respect to the hiring and discharging of employees. Duncan also supervised Koike and Onishi, both of whom, as we noted above, had authority to hire and discharge employees. Gallagher had authority to hire. On March 31, the, day the monthly paid foremen were laid off, Gallagher and Duncan held a conference in Gallagher's office at the plant. They decided at this conference to launch a membership campaign for Local No. 2532. Accordingly they persuaded other foremen to accept membership in that organization and to solicit memberships on its behalf. During the ensuing week Foremen Gallagher, Duncan, Anderson, McKay, and Lansberry engaged in widespread solicitation. They informed the employees that affiliation with Local No. 2532 would end the boycott and thereby enable them to return to work. This, it will be recalled, was the theme of the respondent's posted letter to the employees. It will also be recalled that that letter con- cluded with the question, "What are you going to do about it?" The respondent addressed the question explicitly to the foremen as well as- to°the other employees. The .letter, was thus -wclear invitation to the foremen to procure the change in affiliation which the respondent desired. Gallagher, who initiated the foremen's campaign, testified that he knew the plant would reopen if a majority of the employees affiliated with Local No. 2532 because he interpreted the posted letter to the employees to mean that the respondent would resume opera- tions upon elimination of the boycott. We find that by the posted letter the respondent instigated the foremen's solicitation. 3. The reopening of the plant on April 7 1938, and events subsequent thereto By April 7 many employees had applied for, and accepted, mem- bership in Local No. 2532. The boycott ended and the plant reopened under circumstances which we set forth in Section III subsection D, infra. We find in that subsection that the respondent discriminated in regard to hire and tenure of employment on and after April 7, ther:eby' encouraging, membership in Local No. 2532 and discouraging membership in Local No. 3. Upon the reopening of the plant in April, a committee representing Local No. 3 called upon A. E. McIntosh to protest an alleged- disre- 14 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD gard of seniority by the respondent in selecting persons for reinstate- ment. In the course of this conference A. E. McIntosh stated that he would not take any action which would cause the Carpenters to reimpose the boycott. Although he denied any intention of main- taining a Local No. 2532 majority to prevent a recurrence of the boycott, nevertheless he stated to the committee that he would not agree not to permit the prospect of a renewed boycott to color his judgment in making adjustments in the selection of employees. The committee suggested that Local No. 3 would file charges against the respondent. A.. E. McIntosh replied in substance : "Well, I know that is going to be your move. I will admit that I will probably have to pay some back pay" but "I am going on and run this mill the way I see fit." A. E. McIntosh's statements at this conference 'reveal that the respondent had determined to favor Local No. 2532 in order to avoid a recurrence of the boycott. This policy of the respondent emerges clearly from the speech which Kenneth McIntosh delivered to the planing-mill employees. This department had remained closed after April 7. On April 18 Kenneth addressed a group of employees who were anxious to know when and how the planing-mill department could resume operations. The substance of his talk was as follows : (1) The planing mill had been unprofitable during the previous 6 months and it was difficult to foresee whether or not market conditions would justify renewed operations in that department. (2) The respondent proposed, as far as was possible, to do nothing that would bring about a recurrence of the boycott; since if that should occur, the respondent would again shut down the whole plant. (3) The planing mill could not reopen unless it commanded a crew which had the respondent's interests at heart and which would prevent the Carpenters from again subjecting the respondent to a boycott. (4) The planing-mill employees could learn at the Labor Temple, the headquarters of Local No. 2532, "what they had to do to keep that boycott off." This speech was a further instance of Kenneth McIntosh's "playing his cards" to induce the. employees to join Local No. 2532. By the first statement set forth above, he aroused the apprehensions of the employees that the department might not reopen. He thereby en- hanced their susceptibility to the respondent's wishes. By the second and third statements, he in effect informed his audience that the- planing-mill department could reopen only if it had an A. F. of L. crew. That this was his meaning is plain, since the whole purpose of the boycott had been to compel the respondent's employees to return.to Local No. 2532. Obviously the method of ending the boy- cott would be the method of preventing its renewal;, namely, affiliation with Local •No..2532. By the fourth statement Kenneth McIntosh left no, doubt as to the purport of his speech. The Carpenters had WEST -OREGO LUMBER COMPANY 15 imposed the boycott. Obviously the Carpenters would inform em- ployees that "what they had to do to keep that boycott off" was to become members of Local No. 2532, and it is inconceivable that this was not uppermost in his mind.' In the course of the speech Clarence Nordyke, a member of the plant committee of Local No. 3, asked Kenneth McIntosh whether he was informing the planing-mill employees that the reopening of their department depended upon their becoming affiliated with Local No. 2532. Kenneth McIntosh's reply, testified to by- Nordyke, was sub- stantially as follows : the employees "would have to figure that out" for themselves, since "a federal -law . . . prohibited him from telling the employees what they would have to join." This reply could mean :.the employees "would have to figure . . . out" for them- selves (1) the meaning of the speech or (2) whether or not the reopen- ing of the department was contingent upon affiliation with Local No. 2532 . In either event this reply did not tend to change the coercive meaning or to counteract the coercive effect of the speech. At the close of Kenneth Mclntosh's speech Nordyke repeated his question. Substantially the following colloquy, testified to by Nordyke, ensued : (MCINTOSH.) I stand on my constitutional right and refuse to answer that question. (NoRDYKE.) Would it incriminate yourself? (MCINTOSH.) You took the words right out of my mouth. By these. statements Kenneth McIntosh further revealed the coercive purport of his speech. Kenneth McIntosh also answered Nordyke's question by stating that he was not advising the planing-mill employees to join, he was simply noting where they could learn under what circumstances the Carpenters would again impose a boycott against the respondent's business . In its context this, of course, was equivalent to stating that although he was not advising the employees to join Local No. 2532, nevertheless they had better join if they wished the planing mill to reopen , since the respondent would not incur the risk of another boy- cott by reopening that department without a Carpenters' crew. The planing-mill employees could not escape understanding Ken- neth McIntosh's purpose. Nordyke testified as follows in this connection : Q. What did you understand him to mean when he said the answer to the boycott was in the Labor Temple? ' On cross-examination Kenneth McIntosh *as evasive with respect to the information which he contemplated would be received by employees who went to the Labor Temple. He testified finally that one of the possibilities he considered when he told the employees to go to the Labor Temple was that they would be informed there that they would have to become members of Local No. 2532. 16 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD A. He didn't definitely tell us to go to the Labor Temple : but he couldn't have made it any plainer if he had to me, and that is why I interrupted him at the time. Q. Was that the general understanding of those present, do you know? A. I can speak for myself and all .I have talked to, and that is exactly it. He couldn't have made it any plainer if he had come out and wrote it on the board, than to go to the Labor Temple and join the A. F. of L., or the planer mill would not start. Q. Do you know whether or not that was the understanding of those who heard the speech? A. It was to some that I have talked to. I couldn't state for all of them, because I haven't talked to all of them .. . Bertucci, a planing-mill employee, testified that a number of plan- ing-mill employees declared, after the speech, that they would have to join Local No. 2532 in order to secure the reopening of the depart- ment. To illustrate their attitude, Bertucci cited Ben Sears, a plan -ing-mill employee, who said, "Well, everything is lost," and signed a card for membership in Local No. 2532. Kenneth delivered his talk in a section of the plant called the grinding room. During Kenneth's talk F. R. Hinckle, an employee who was also an active solicitor on behalf of Local No. 2532, brought some membership application cards into the grinding room and left them there. Foreman Anderson left before, and Kenneth left upon the completion of the speech. Immediately thereafter the applica- tion cards were circulated among persons in the audience. Although Anderson observed Hinckle bring the cards into the grinding room, and therefore must have known that membership solicitation on be- half of Local No. 2532 would take place on the respondent's property in conjunction with McIntosh's speech, he made no effort to forestall such solicitation. If any employees had any doubts with respect to the purport of McIntosh's speech, those doubts must have been dis- pelled when the distribution of Local No. 2532 membership cards followed immediately after his speech and upon company property. It will be recalled that in his speech Kenneth McIntosh cast doubts on whether or not the respondent would reopen the planing-mill department. In this connection Kenneth testified that "we were not ready for it at that time. The market conditions and the logs we were cutting, nothing led us to believe it would be feasible for us to open up that side of the mill." The planing mill, however, com- menced operations on April 25, only 7 days after Kenneth McIntosh's talk. The record does not show any uncontemplated change in market or other conditions during this interval that would suddenly persuade the respondent to reopen the planing-mill department. WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 17 The reasonable inference is that on April 18 the respondent already contemplated renewing operations in the planing mill. Kenneth McIntosh, therefore, had an immediate motive for enrolling the plan- ing-mill employees into Local No. 2532. He wanter them to join so that the respondent could reopen the planing-mill department without incurring opposition from Local No. 2532. The record discloses additional credible testimony throwing light on Kenneth McIntosh's activity at this time. He exhibited to James Park, an employee, a letter of resignation from Local No. 3 signed by Joe Chapo, an employee, and asked Park in substance whether he "would do the same." Kenneth,McIntosh also questioned William Theis about his union affiliation. He asked Theis in substance whether Theis would not "be better off under the A. F. of L." Theis replied he would not, and McIntosh "wanted to know why." During the conversation McIntosh made several remarks from which Theis understood that he would not be reinstated unless he joined Local No. 2532. Theis asked whether lie understood McIntosh correctly and McIntosh re- plied substantially as follows : "I wouldn't make a statement of that kind, but there are some of the men that are never going to get back and you may be one of them." We find that Kenneth McIntosh's statements to Theis constituted a threat that he would be denied reinstatement if he did not accept membership in Local No. 2532. On the witness stand, a number of supervisory employees denied that they solicited members for Local No.,.2532 after they returned to the pay roll on acid= after April 7. The following considerations preclude us from giving substantial weight to these denials. Many of them were vague, general, and pro forma. The record contains much credible, mutally corroborative, and in some instances undenied, testimony which conflicts with these denials. Moreover since the foremen admittedly engaged in widespread solicitation between April 1 and April 7 it is unlikely that they would not continue such activity thereafter. The motives for such activity did not cease after April 7. Furthermore, the Mclntoshes inspired this solicitation by the posted letter prior to the shut-down and the respondent's manifest policy after April 7 was continued aid to Local. No:'2532. The reasonable inference therefore is that the supervisory employees would continue to execute the respondent's policy. The record con- vinces us that the respondent's supervisory employees engaged in interference, restraint, and coercion, after April 7, 1938, and we so find. Illustrative thereof are the following incidents established by the credible evidence. .On April 11 Roy Colglazier, a member of Local No. 3, applied to Wilkinson, superintendent of the plant and in charge of reinstate- 1s DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD ments ; for reinstatement. Wilkinson , in the words of Colgiazier, "told me if I would sign up with the A. F. of L., I would go back to work." Colglazier stated that he would not join. He has never received reinstatement. Sometime after the plant reopened Carl Engbrecht asked Gal- lagher, yard foreman and a participant in the selection of persons to be reinstated, "whether there .was going . to be any work." Gal- lagher replied there was "nothing doing, " although he agreed that business would be "picking up." Engbrecht "stalled around" the plant during the morning and finally asked Gallagher whether he would be reinstated if he joined Local No. 2532. Gallagher replied in the affirmative. Engbrecht signed an application card that day and on the following day he so reported to Gallagher . Pursuant to Gallagher's direction, Engbrecht reported to Wilkinson that he had "signed up" and Wilkinson replied, "All right. " Gallagher had asked Engbrecht whether he was "going up to the Labor Temple Friday night 'to be obligated into the lodge." Engbrecht stated to Gallagher that he so intended , and he did appear at the ^ Labor .Temple. According to Engbrecht , Gallagher "was up there to see that those fellows did get obligated ." • Engbrecht was reinstated within a few days after he joined . Local No. 2532. Dennis McKay, sawmill foreman, resumed work when the plant reopened on April 7 on a restricted basis. On April .8 Richard Symons, a member of Local No. 3, applied to McKay for reinstate- ment. In Symons' words, McKay "told me the only thing I could do if I wanted to go back to work was to sign the A . F. of L. card, and he said that he had them there, but he couldn't sign me himself during working hours." John Anderson , planing-mill foreman, solicited Henry Snider, a member of Local No. 3, to join Local No. 2532 twice during the shut- down of March-April 1938. Upon the reopening of the plant, Snider applied to Anderson ' for reinstatement: Anderson replied : "You know what the trouble is." Snider has never been reinstated. During the shut-down Paul La.nsberry, millwright foreman, had solicited R. L. Bell , a member of Local No. 3, to join Local No. 2532. When the plant reopened , Bell applied to Lansberry for reinstate- ment. Lansberry replied : "Well , you see what the rest of the boys have done ." Lansberry told Bell that if he would join the A.. F. of L. he could work on the day crew. During the shut-down , Vito Demarinis had signed an application card for membership in Local No . 2532 ' at the request of Gallagher but he had not been notified to return to work .- when the plant re- opened. Shortly thereafter Demarinis applied to -Gallagher for reinstatement. Gallagher told him : "If you want to work , you have WEST OREGON LIMIER, COMPANY I9 got to go down and be initiated." He was reinstated the day. after he accepted the obligations of membership in Local No. 2532. Leslie Carter applied. to the superintendent for work but he was not reinstated. At the Labor Temple he was informed that if he accepted membership in Local No. 2532 on the following Friday night he would be reinstated on the Monday thereafter. Carter "took the obligation" that Friday night. The following day he in- formed Foreman Anderson that he was now "a full-fledged" member of Local No. 2532 and Anderson replied that Anderson knew he was. Anderson also informed him that he could return to work that Monday and he did. . About the beginning of May, Anderson told Jack Williams that if he had "any hopes" of being reinstated he would "have to go over to the Labor Temple." The following incidents also occurred subsequent to the reopening of the plant. Harry Duncan, yard foreman,' and Frank Onishi, greeln- chain boss, told Fred Kokubu that he, would be reinstated if he joined Local No. 2532. Gallagher resumed work on April 7, and thereafter he solicited Mike Kovach to join Local No. 2532. After the plant reopened Gallagher and Duncan asked Kohachi Itoyama to join Local No. 2532. Delbert Bennett became foreman of the green-lumber sorting department on April 20, 1938. Thereafter Earl Johnson asked Bennett whether he had to procure an A. F. of L. button before he could be reinstated. Bennett replied : "I wouldn't tell you that, but you can see who is working and draw your own conclusions." When the plant closed down on March 18, 1938, Saki Hokamura was a member of Local No. 3. A few days before the reopening of April 11, Hisakichi Koike told him that he would have to join Local No. 2532. He signed an A. F. of L. card and on April 11 he was reinstated to his position as a chain puller. On the following day. April 12, Hokamura rejoined Local No. 3. Thereupon Frank Onishi_ discharged him, giving as the reason Hokamura's reahiliation with Local No. 3. On April 19, 1938, the respondent reinstated George Jacobs, a, member of Local No. 3. On the following day, A. J. ("Red") Aldridge 5 and F. R. Hinkle, employees of the respondent, solicited memberships for Local No. 2532 in the plant during working hours.. They asked Jacobs to join Local No. 2532 but he refused to do so. After leaving Jacobs, Hinckle and Aldridge approached Foreman Anderson and spoke to him for about half an hour. The following day, April 21, Anderson notified Jacobs that he had received orders. from the office to lay Jacobs off. On the following Monday, April In the transcript his name is sometimes misspelled Aldrich. 20 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD I 25, Jacobs applied to Foreman Bennett for reinstatement. Bennett exhibited a list of names to Jacobs and stated, "they are all A. F. of 11. on there but one." The following Monday Jacobs again applied to Bennett for reinstatement. Bennett told him : "You know as well as I do why you are not getting a job." The one person on the list exhibited by Bennett to Jacobs on April 25, who was not affiliated with Local No. 2532, was identified by Jacobs as "Tony." According to Jacobs, "Tony went to work and about a half hour after he came off the job too;" that is, he was dis- charged. The record reveals that this Tony was Tony Kitrina, a member of Local. No. 3., On the day his department opened Kitrina applied to Bennett- for work and he was .reinstated. He' was dis- charged at the end of half an hour. In the words of Kitrina, Su- perintendent Wilkinson had told Bennett "that if he [sic] didn't sign over to A. F. of L., he would send me home." The respondent rein- stated John Kostrba to Kitrina's position. Kostrba had become a member of Local No. 2532 prior to such reinstatement. In May and June 1938 Local No. 2532 circulated petitions for. the signature of employees of the respondent. These petitions were addressed to the National Labor Relations Board. According to these petitions, the signers purported to revoke their affiliation with Local No. 3 and to certify their affiliation with Local No. 2532. These petitions continued and reinforced the interference, re- straint, and coercion, by the respondent's supervisory employees, favorable. to Local No. 2532 and prejudicial to Local No. 3. They were circulated throughout the plant during working hours by representatives of Local No. 2532. Superintendent Wilkinson and Foreman Gallagher authorized such use of the respondent's property. In view of the other acts of interference, restraint, and coercion by the respondent and its supervisory - employees, hereinabove men- tioned, such authorized use of company time and property for organizational purposes made unmistakable the respondent's deter- mination to coerce its employees into abandoning Local No. 3 and into affiliating with Local No. 2532. Moreover, it is inconceivable that the supervisory employees were not present when the persons circulating the petitions asked employees to sign, since the petitions were circulated throughout the plant. Their presence at this time and their membership in Local, No. 2532 necessarily coerced em- ployees into signing the petitions because employees could not help but feel that their failure to sign would become ' known to the respondent and thereby subject them to discrimination for not carry- ing out. the respondent's clearly manifested will. Furthermore, the evidence shows that Gallagher actively aided representatives of Local No. 2532 in procuring signatures to the petitions. O. H. Hill, business agent of Local. No. 2532; "Red". Ald= WEST OREGO1\71 LUMBER COMPANY 21 ridge, and F. R. Hinckle , asked Carl Engbrecht and his partner, identified as "Jim,' ' to sign one of the petitions while the latter two were at work. In order "to get rid of" the solicitors, Eng- brecht and his partner stated that they "would think it over." About 15 minutes later Hill returned with Gallagher . Hill asked : "Well, have you fellows decided yet ?" Gallagher stated: "Jim, it is just for the bargaining agency." Jim replied : "Yes, I know it is. Well, I will sign the damn thing. " Accordingly , as Engbrecht explained on the witness stand, "there was nothing for me to do but to sign it. too." On the last 2 days of the first hearing in this case , June 29 and 30, 1938, many witnesses testified that although they had signed the petitions circulated by Local No . 2532; nevertheless they wished to be represented by Local No . 3. One such employee was named N. P. Nielson . In the supplementary hearing he testified , and we find, that within a few days after the close of the first hearing Fore- man Bennett made substantially the following statement to a group of employees, including Nielson : Q. . . . did anyone from the management of the West Ore- gon plant tell you that you had to belong to any union in order to have a job? A. Well, it was brought up in this way ... we were sitting talking things over, and Mr . Bennett came out and sat with us, and he made the statement that if any of us didn 't change our minds, there would be a lot of new faces around there. The respondent did not call Bennett to the stand to explain this statement . This statement of Bennett further establishes that the respondent was engaged in coercing its employees into transferring their affiliation from Local No. 3 to Local No. 2532. Obviously , under the circumstances disclosed by this case , it would have been futile for Local No. 3 to apply to the respondent for per- mission to circulate similar petitions on company property and on company time. On July 6, 1938 , the respondent executed a contract with Local No. 2532. We discuss this contract below and the circumstances leading to its execution. 4. Concluding findings The acts and statements of A. E. and Kenneth McIntosh and of Superintendent Wilkinson , hereinabove set forth , are, of course, attributable to the respondent. From the facts we have found above it is clear that Fred Gallagher, Harry Duncan, John Anderson , Dennis McKay, Paul Lansberry, Delbert Bennett, Hisakichi Koike, and Frank Onishi were supervisory 28.30,31-41-vol . 20--7, 22 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD employees at the time they engaged in the statements and acts herein- above set forth, that they represented management, and that these statements and acts were attributable to the respondent. The respondent in fact admits that the supervisory employees known 'as foremen constitute a part of management. Thus A. E. McIntosh testified as follows : I have always argued with our plant committees and with the officials of the union that they [foremen] were in such close connection with the management that, for the sake of the union itself, I have always told them that I thought they should exclude foremen. The Mclntoshes and other witnesses for the respondent testified that A. E. and Kenneth McIntosh instructed foremen not to engage in union solicitation. Such testimony by the Mclntoshes also con- stitutes a clear recognition on their part that such a foreman repre- sents management and that his activity on behalf of one of two rival unions reveals to employees, and coerces the employees into adopt- ing, the employer's selection of a collective bargaining representative for them, thereby preventing their exercise of rights guaranteed in Section 7. Thus, even if we assume that instructions were given to the fore- men not to engage ih union solicitation the crucial fact remains that the foremen represented and acted for the respondent." Foremen are company representatives as well. The respondent is responsible for the acts of its representatives, for the effect on employees of coercive acts of foremen is telling, whether or not the acts have specific sanction from above. To remove the effect of such discrimi- natory tactics; vigorous remedial measures, clearly brought to the attention of the employees, are obviously required. We see in this record no evidence of.any such effective action to make clear to the employees that the foremen were not acting for the respondent and that the respondent would preclude the foremen from wielding their power against employees who refused to accede to their solicitation. It does not even appear that the fact that such instructions were given to the foremen was communicated to the employees. On the other hand, the record does show that supervisory' employees did wield management power to the detriment of those who refused to affiliate with Local No. 2532. Finally, the statements and acts of A. E. and Kenneth McIntosh and of Wilkinson made clear to the supervisory employees that the respondent had established a policy of assistance to Local No. 2532, thereby superseding, in effect, the asserted instructions. 6 Cf. Swift & Co. V. National Labor Relations Board, 106 F. (2d) 87 (C. C. A. 10th). WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 23' As we have noted, the foremen who participated in the member- ship campaign during the first week in April were not receiving any wages at that time. It is clear, however, that they remained man- .agement representatives during this period. Both they and the respondent ' contemplated that these foremen would return to their usual positions on the pay roll upon the resumption of operations. Moreover, there is nothing in the record to show that the employees ceased to consider the foremen as supervisory employees simply be- cause the foremen were not receiving any salary. Finally, as we have already found, the respondent invited the foremen's member- ship campaign by its posted notice. Although Koike, Onishi, and the foremen were management repre- sentatives, they were eligible for membership in Local No. 3 and Local No. 2532. We hold, nevertheless, that their statements and acts, hereinabove set forth, constitute unfair labor practices by the respondent because these statements and acts were inspired by the policy of assistance and discrimination established by the Mclntoshes and by Wilkinson, and we so hold; further, because union rules can- not sanction management interference, restraint, and coercion. The Act was directed against interference by management with the exer- cise by employees of rights guaranteed in Section T. Since by Section 1 of the Act it is the policy of the United States to protect commerce through the guarantees. in Section 7 and through the prohibitions in Section 8, those guarantees and those prohibitions cannot be set aside by the rules of private organizations.' In Matter of Tennessee Copper Company 8 we answered a similar question as follows: Membership of supervisory employees in a labor organization in- volved in a controversy over representation cannot confer on such employees a privilege to interfere, nor can the immunity guaranteed employees by the Act be impaired or diminished by the membership rules of any labor organization. The employees' right to a choice free from employer interference is absolute. Supervisory employees, although eligible for membership in com- peting labor organizations, are forbidden by the Act, in their capacity as the employer's agents, to interfere in the selection of employee bargaining representatives In a. prior Decision 9 and in the present Decision (Section III C 1) we find that a unit of the respondent's plant and production em- ployees, including foremen, is appropriate for the purposes of collec- ' Compare Matter of Ingram Manufacturing Company and Textile Workers Organizing, Committee, 5 N. L. R. B. 908. 8 Matter of Tennessee Copper Company and A. F. of L. Federal Union No. 21,. 8 N. L. R. B. 575, 9 N. L. R. B. 117. 9 Supra , footnote 2, Matters of Jones Lumber Company, etc ., 3 N. L. R. B. 855. 24 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD tive bargaining within the meaning of Section 9 (b) of the Act. Such finding does not constitute a determination that foremen do not speak and act for management or that representatives of manage- ment can engage in activities not permitted to management under Sections 7 and 8 of the Act. As we note below our finding with respect to the appropriate unit for the respondent's employees is based upon our usual practice of adopting the apparent desires of the parties. We therefore see no reason for altering our conclusion with respect to the respondent's responsibility for the acts and statements of its representatives. We find that the acts and statements of the management represen- tatives set forth in Section III B 1, 2, and 3 are attributable to the respondent. The respondent's solicitation on behalf of Local No. 2532 on or about February 8, 1938, through Koike and Onishi, and through the use of its property, constituted interference, restraint, and coercion. Its coercive effect was intensified by the fact that it was based on the respondent's announced position that the respondent could not oper- ate unless the boycott was eliminated, and further by the fact that March's solicitation occurred during a stoppage of machinery sanc- tioned by the superintendent. The respondent did not counteract this assistance to Local No. 2532. On the contrary, it increased this assistance, to the detriment of Local No. 3, in the following months. The respondent's course of conduct after the plant reopened on March 7 reveals a studied and finally successful effort to coerce the employees into joining Local No. 2532. The respondent desired this change in union affiliation and was intent on procuring it by the use of some method like the letter to the employees which the respondent issued on or about March 16. This posted notice in substance threatened a shut-down unless the employees reaffiliated with Local No. 2532. It also invited the fore- men to effectuate the respondent's purpose. When the change in affiliation did not materialize the respondent shut the plant. The respondent's motive, its determination, and the posted letter compel the conclusion that by the shut-down the respondent proposed to compel its employees to accept membership in Local No. 2532. Subsequent events corroborate our conclusion that the shut-down commencing March-18 was an integral part of the respondent's un- lawful plan to aid Local No. 2532. The foremen, acting upon the invitation extended in the posted letter, exploited and developed the coercion inherent in the threat to close and in the consequent shut-down, by systematically solicit- ing the employees and by warning that the plant could not reopen until the membership campaign of Local No. 2532 was successful. WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY' 25 These efforts of the respondent induced a number of persons to accept membership in Local No. 2532. Accordingly the respondent resumed operations and reinstated persons upon the basis of union affiliation, thereby further encouraging membership in Local No. 2532 and discouraging membership in Local No. 3. The respondent continued to insist that the operation of the plant depended upon the employees becoming affiliated with Local No. 2532. By solicitation, threat, and the use, of its property, the re- spondent engaged in further interference, restraint, and coercion, assisting Local No. 2532 to the disadvantage of Local No. 3. Although we deplore the dual union dispute and the dilemma in which it placed the respondent, we cannot for that reason close our eyes to the fact that the respondent sought to escape the dilemma by taking action which the act forbids both in provision and policy. The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit enforced our order in a. similar case and stated the following: The respondent further contends that it was necessary to make the, transfer, and thus engage in the unfair labor practice, because its business would otherwise be disrupted, and therefore, under all the facts, the transfer was excusable. We think, how- ever, the act is controlling. The act prohibits unfair labor prac- tices in all cases. It permits no immunity because the employer may think that the exigencies of the moment require infraction of the statute. In fact, nothing in the statute permits or justi- fies its violation by the employer.10 The respondent appears to claim that the effectiveness of the boy- cott prevented further operation of the plant after March 18. The record contains much evidence with respect to whether or not the San Francisco boycott affected the respondent, and as we noted above the boycott did interfere substantially with the respondent's business in San Francisco." The record shows, however, that the respondent '°National Labor Relations Board v. Star Publishing Company, 97 F. (2d) 465 (C. C. A. 9th). 11 Of the 2 , 758,365 board feet of lumber arriving in San Francisco between January 1 and March 18, 1938, including lumber sent on speculation and lumber sold in advance of shipment, the respondent failed to sell or to complete delivery on 1,019,564 board feet, or 37 per cent , between January 1 and March 18, 1938. The figure of 1,847 , 269 board feet , given by the respondent as remaining on the docks in San Francisco , includes 76,465 board feet which arrived in San Francisco in 1937 and with respect to which no claim is made that the boycott prevented its sale . The figure of 1,847,269 board feet also includes at least 7-51.240 board feet which were shipped on the 6arbara C. in advance of sale and which arrived at San Francisco between March 19 and March 21, that is , after the plant closed . Under normal conditions the respondent "turns over " stock , which is shipped to San Francisco in advance of sale , in about 30 days. The respondent's witnesses estimated that about 40 per cent of the lumber shipped to January 1 and April 11, 1938. The respondent's witnesses estimated that about 40 per cent of the lumber shipped to San Francisco is shipped in advance of sale, that is, on speculation . The record indicates that the percentage of lumber shipped to San Francisco in advance of sale during the '26 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD would have operated beyond March 18. Thus at the conference which occurred on March 11 or on March 15, Kenneth McIntosh made substantially the following statement as testified to by George Brown : A.... I asked him how'much longer he could keep his mill in operation with the orders that he had on hand at that time. Q. And what was his reply to that? A. He replied that he could run possibly for two weeks on his present orders, shipping this lumber to southern California and the Los Angeles areas. Further, from figures given by A. E. and Kenneth McIntosh on the witness stand, with respect to the respondent's unfilled orders on March 15 and with respect to the respondent's average daily produc- tion at that time, it appears that the respondent would have operated about 8 working days beyond March 15, or 5 working days beyond the date of the shut-down, filling orders which were already on band .12 Moreover, were it true that the respondent could not operate the plant after March 18, the evidence would still warrant but one inter- pretation; namely, the respondent used the threat of a shut-down, the shut-down commencing March 18, and the subsequent reopening, as instruments for assisting Local No. 2532 to recover its position with the respondent's employees. By thus seeking to thwart Local No. 3, and to aid Local No. 2532, the respondent committed an unfair labor practice regardless of its ulterior motives, whether or not they period of the boycott was substantially greater than 40 per cent . Thus the fourth cargo in this period , that carried by the Barbara C., consisted of 1,095 ,329 board feet of which at least 751 ,240 board feet, or close to 70 per cent , was shipped on speculation. The respondent 's witnesses estimated that of the 1,847 ,269 board feet remaining unsold or undelivered on the docks in San Francisco prior to the end of the boycott , the re- spondent sold but could not deliver about 400 ,000 board feet. In other words, of the amount which remained unsold or sold but undelivered , during the period of the boycott, about 78 per cent represented unsold lumber, and only about 22 per cent represented sold but undelivered lumber. The distinction between unsold lumber and lumber sold but undelivered is important on this record since the latter may be ascribed directly to boycott activity whereas the. former may have been due to any number of factors. Since most of the lumber remaining on the docks in San Francisco during the period' of the boycott was lumber which was not sold , it follows that the extent to which the boycott affected the respondent 's business in San Francisco and the net effect thereof on the respondent 's total business cannot be measured because of the presence of other factors including the general depression in the lumber industry, completion by the re- spondent of its California sales outlet only late in 1937, changes in the respondent ' s sales price for lumber, and the notable flexibility of demand for lumber in relation to the sales price. 12 A. E. McIntosh testified that the respondent had orders for a minimum of 2,500,000 board feet of lumber and a maximum of 3,500 , 000 board feet which remained unfilled. on March 15 . The average of 2,500 ,000 and 3,500 ,000 is 3,000 , 000. Estimates given by A. E. and Kenneth McIntosh as to the respondent 's daily production at this time varied from 300,000 board feet to 425,000 board feet the average of 300,000 and 425,000 is 362,500. If.the respondent produced 362,500 board feet a day and the respondent had orders for 3,000,000 board feet, then the respondent would have filled the orders in approximately 8 working days. WES'T OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 27 \ included a desire to eliminate the boycott. That a determination to thwart Local No. 3 and to aid Local No. 2532 may not have been the sole incentive for the shut-down is equally immaterial. 13 If the boycott rendered operation of the plant futile, the respondent was privileged to close, but not to use any such shut-down to propel the employees into a labor organization which they in fact had previously rejected. The record compels the conclusion that the respondent used the shut-down as a discriminatory weapon. Accordingly, we find that by the shut-down commencing March 18, 1938, the respondent discriminated in regard to the hire and tenure and terms and conditions of employment of all the employees in its employment on that date, thereby discouraging membership in Local No. 3 and encouraging membership in Local No. 2532. We find further that by the stoppage of February 8, 1938; the shut-down commencing March 18, 1938; the solicitation of Koike and Onishi on and about February 8, 1938, the statements of Kenneth McIntosh on or about March 11, 1938; the notice to the employees on or about March 16, 1938; the solicitation by the foremen on and off the re- spondent's property on and after April 1, 1938; A. E. McIntosh's statements to the representatives of Local No. 3 on or about April 11, 1938; Kenneth McIntosh's statements to the planing-mill employees on or about April 18, 1938, and the solicitation in connection there- with; Kenneth McIntosh's statements and acts with respect to James Park and William Theis; the statements and acts of the respondent's supervisory employees after April 7, 1938; the circulation of the peti- tions on the respondent's property in May and June 1938, and the statements by supervisory, employees in connection therewith ; and the threats and discrimination involved in these statements and acts of, or attributable to, the respondent, the respondent has interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in the exercise of the right to self-organization, to form, join, or assist labor organizations, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining, as guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act. C. The refusal to bargain collectively with Local No. 3; exclusive recognition of Local No. 25372; the closed-shop contract 1. The appropriate unit On September 1, 1937, a petition was filed on behalf of Local No. 3 with the Regional Director for the Nineteenth Region, alleging 13 See National Labor Relations Board v. Stackpole Carbon Company, 105 F . (2d) 167 (C. C. A. 3d), cert. den'd , 308, U. S. 605; National Labor Relations Board v. Remington- Rand, Inc., 94 F. (2d) 862 (C. C. A. 2d ), cert. den'd 304 U. S. 576 , 585; Matter of Borden Mills , Inc. and Textile Workers Organizing Committee , 13 N. L. R. B. 459. 28 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD that questions affecting commerce had arisen concerning the repre- sentation of employees of the respondent, and requesting the Board to conduct an investigation pursuant to Section 9 (c) of the Act. On October 21, 1937, after hearing upon due notice, the Board issued its Decision 14 and certified Local No. 3 as the exclusive repre- sentative of all the plant and production employees of the re- spondent, including foremen, but excluding office employees and. supervisory employees above the rank of foremen. In the present cases Local No. 2532 is satisfied with the unit which we designated in our Decision dated October 21, 1937. Local No. 3 does not request that we designate a different unit for the purposes of the complaint case. At the hearings, the respondent did not assert any interest in the scope of the unit. Accordingly, we find that the respondent's plant and production employees including foremen but excluding office employees and supervisory employees above the rank of foremen constitute a unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining and that said unit insures to the employees of the respondent the full benefit of their rights to self-organization and collective bargaining and other- wise effectuates the policies of the Act. 2. Representation by Local No. 3 of the majority in the appropriate unit In our Decision and Certification dated October 21, 1937, we found that Local No. 3 was the duly designated representative of the ma- jority of the respondent's employees in the appropriate unit, and pursuant to Section 9 (a) of the Act, the exclusive representative of all the employees in such unit for the purposes of collective bargain- ing in respect to rates of pay, wages, hours of employment, and other conditions of employment. Since a "state of affairs once shown to exist is presumed to continue until the contrary is shown," 15 Local No. 3 was the exclusive repre- sentative of the defined unit for collective bargaining purposes at all times after October 21, 1937, unless it is shown that Local No. 3 lost this status.16 The question is raised by the record whether or not Local No. 3 lost this status on or about and after May 11, 1938. The respondent produced a petition dated May 11, 1938, which con- tains about 180 signatures. The petition recites that the signers constitute a majority of the respondent's employees in a defined unit, that they designate Local No. 2532 as their bargaining agent, and that 14 Matters of Jones Lumber Company , etc., supra , footnote 2, 3 N. L. R. B. 855. 15 National Labor Relation Board v. National Motor Bearing Company, 105 F. ( 2d) 652 (C. C. A. 9th). 11 In addition to our Decision and Certification dated October 21, 1937 , other evidence in the record shows that Local No . 3 was designated by a majority in March 1938. WEST OR .EiGO'N LUMBER COMPANY 29 they rescind their affiliation with Local No. 3. Local No. 2532 pro- duced a similar petition dated June 1, 1938, and containing 12 sig- natures. Local No. 2532 also produced about 175 signed affidavits dated at various times between June 21 and July 8, 1938, which state in substance that the signers designate Local No. 2532 of their "own free will," as their bargaining agent. Many persons who signed one of the petitions also signed an affidavit. We must consider whether or not these petitions and affidavits constitute genuine revocations of the authority of Local No. 3 and genuine designations of Local No. 2532. As we have found above in Section III B, the respondent engaged in unfair labor practices on or about February 8, 1938,' and after March 7, 1938. The necessary effect of this course of conduct was to coerce employees into joining Local No. 2532, and into signing the petitions and affidavits. 17 Indeed, as we have already seen the peti- tions were circulated on the respondent's property with the explicit approval and assistance of supervisory employees. Moreover, the record contains much credible testimony directly to the effect that the witnesses joined Local No. 2532 and signed the petitions because of given statements, actions, and conditions, which are an integral part, or a clear consequence, of the respondent's unfair labor practices. Thus N. P. Nielson was a member of Local No. 3 at the time of the shut-down commencing March 18. Following the shut-down of March 18 he understood that the respondent would not reopen the plant unless the employees joined Local No. 2532. When the plant reopened he understood that the planing mill would not reopen until a majority of that department's crew became affiliated with Local No. 2532. Toward the end of April he concluded that he could not be reinstated unless he joined Local No. 2532. Nielson testified in this connection as follows : Q. . . . Isn't it a fact, Mr. Nielson, that the impression that you got that you had to belong to the A. F. of L. Union in order to hold a job was gained by you in the initial or casual conversa- tions that you had with members of your own crew? A. No, it was not covered by casual conversation, be- cause . . . the only way I could get back [to work, about May 1] was after I signed up. The job was running, and the other fellows that had returned had signed up; and I was down there several days [i. e., applied several times] and I couldn't get on. I went to the Labor Temple [headquarters of Local No. 2532] 17 From the record it is clear that at the time the petitions and affidavits were signed, employees of the respondent believed that membership in Local No. 2532 already was, or soon would be, a condition of employment. The inescapable conclusion is that the em- ployes flocked to sign the petitions and affidavits in order to be sure that they filled this condition of employment . This belief of the employees and their consequent action must be attributed on this record to the respondent's unfair labor practices. 30 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD on Friday night [to accept membership] and on [the following] Monday morning I got my job back. There was no question about it. Nielson testified further that he did not join Local No. 2532 at this time of his own free will, and that he was coerced because he "couldn't go to work without joining." Shortly after he resumed work he was solicited by Hinckle, a fellow employee, to sign a peti- tion designating Local No. 2532 as his bargaining agent. The solici- tation occurred on company property. Nielson and Hinckle en- gaged in substantially the following ; conversation : A. . . . He [Hinckle] told me this : "Do you want the A. F. of L. to be your bargaining agency?" I [Nielson] said, "No, not intentionally." He said, "You want to work, don't you?" I said, "Yes." Then he said, "You had better sign it." Nielson signed the petition in order to retain his position. Henry Roza was a member of Local No. 3 on March 18, the day the plant closed. A few days before the plant reopened he joined Local No. 2532 pursuant to the solicitation of Foreman McKay. Roza testified in this connection that he "just joined to lift the boy- cott and get to work," and that he "was forced to join . . . they [McKay and another] come out after me to sign it." Sometime after Roza resumed work, he and a number of other employees were eating their lunch in the grinding room at the plant when Hinckle and Hill approached one of the persons in the group and asked him to sign the petition. Upon the refusal of this employee to sign the petition Hinckle and Hill wrote his name down "for some kind of reason or other." This induced Roza to sign the petition because he was.afraid that he might lose his position if he did not sign it. Carl Engbrecht was a member of Local No. 3 at the time of the shut-down commencing March 18. We have described above the coercive circumstances under which he joined Local No. 2532 and under which he signed the petition. He testified that he did not sign the petition voluntarily because of the way they went about it. Because the way we had to sign up for the A. F. of L. to get work, we just figured that we had to sign that [the petition] too in order to keep working. Q. . . . Did anybody tell you that? A. No; they didn't tell me that; no. They didn't come right out and tell me, but when we were asked by the foremen the second time, we figured out just about what was going to happen. Sam Lane was a member of Local No. 3 at the time of the shut- down commencing March 18. When the plant reopened Lane un- derstood that only members of Local No. 2532 were being reemployed. WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 31 He came to the plant to inquire with respect to his reinstatement and he asked Foreman Anderson whether he had to join Local No. 2532. Anderson's reply in substance follows : "Well, I can't say that" because "it will put me on the spot" but "you see what the rest of the fellows are doing." Accordingly, when the planing-mill department reopened, he "figured" that he would not be reinstated unless he joined Local No. 2532; he joined, and he was reinstated. Shortly thereafter, during his lunch period, he signed the petition because he was "afraid" of losing his position unless he did sign it. The testimony of the witnesses named in the footnote is also to the same effect.19 Nielson, Roza, Engbrecht, and Lane, and the employees named in the last footnote were among a group of about 45 signers of petitions who were called to the stand by the Board on the last 2 days of the first hearing in these cases. There is nothing in the record to show that these 45 employees are not a fair sample of the signers of the petitions which were circulated by Local No. 2532. A substantial majority of these 45 witnesses testified that they wished to be repre- sented by Local No. 3, not by Local No. 2532, at-the time they signed the petitions. Almost all of these 45 testified they wished to be represented by Local No. 3, at the time of their testimony. These witnesses, who testified that the petitions did not manifest their uncoerced choice, gave such testimony during the period in which the affidavits were signed. Many of the witnesses who so tes- tified on June 29 and June 30 signed affidavits within a few days thereafter. Nothing had been done to dissipate the effects of the respondent's unfair labor practices. The record affords no reason for believing that the affidavits represent a free and genuine choice any more than do the petitions. There is'affirmative evidence to show the contrary. The affidavits were produced by Local No. 2532 at the supplementary hearing. Only two affiants, Nielson and Roza, testified with respect to their affidavits.19 Nielson signed. his affidavit because the respondent had already executed the closed-shop contract. Roza signed his affidavit, is Mike Minto , Emilios Rosins , Jack Williams, George Hoekstra, James Parks, Melvin Lewis, Frank Parks, C. B. Mitchell, Vito Demarinis, Thorsten Hoglund, John Sjoholm, John Kostroba. Jr., L. J. Callison, Frank Mikesh, John Walyer, Matthew Pfeifer, Joe Pfeifer, Harry Cowles, Martin Lien, Axel Johnson, Mat Hobigal, ( Hobigal ), 0. M. Moore, Adam Vajda, Vincent Uhlar, William Somnerfelt, Pete Bennett, Joe Kovach. 19 They were both called by Local No. 3. It will be recalled that they were among the witnesses called by the Board on June 29 and June 30. The affidavits identified by the notary public who took the acknowledgments were offered by Local No . 2532 and admitted into evidence by the Trial Examiner over the objection of Local No. 3. The affidavits were properly admitted for the limited purpose of showing the ' affiants' purported designa- tion of Local No. 2532. These affidavits recited in substance that the selection of Local No. 2532 was voluntary. There is no showing, however , that the recitals in the affidavits were admitted in lieu of testimony . The Board does not, in the absence of special cir- cumstances , consider testimonial statements in affidavit form. Assuming , however, con- trary to fact, that affiants testified that they designated Local No. 2532 voluntarily, such 32 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD on July 1, because of his belief `that the plant would 'not run" with- out a. Local No. 2532 majority. On the present record of interference, restraint, coercion, discrimi- nation, and the effects thereof, we hold that the petitions and affi- davits do not constitute valid designations of Local No. 2532 or genuine rescissions of the authority of Local No. 3. The number of signatures on these petitions and affidavits registers nothing more than the success of the respondent's campaign of assistance to Local No. 2532. The labor organization with whom the employer is obli- gated to bargain within Section 8 (5) is the one which by Section 9 (a) has been designated by a majority for the purposes of collec- tive bargaining. Local No. 3 has been thus designated and this record reveals no genuine withdrawal of such designation. A com- pany-coerced choice of a labor organization is clearly inoperative.20 It is clear that a company-coerced defection from a. labor organiza- tion is equally invalid.21 To hold otherwise in this case would be to permit the respondent to avoid its obligation under Section 8 (5) by the simple expedient of violating that subsection as well as Sec- tion 8 (1) and (3). Accordingly, we find that a majority of the employees in fact wished to be represented by Local No. 3 at all times after October 21, 1937, and that the contrary has not been shown. We find that on, and at all times after, October 21, 1937, Local No. 3 was the duly designated representative of the majority of the re- spondent's employees in the appropriate unit, and pursuant to Section 9 (a) of the Act, the exclusive representative of all the employees in such unit for the purposes of collective bargaining in respect to rates of pay, wages, hours of employment, and other conditions of employment. 3. The refusal to bargain with Local No. 3; exclusive recognition of Local No. 2532; the closed-shop contract (a) History The complaint alleges and the answer denies that the respondent has refused and continues to refuse to bargain collectively with Local No. 3. testimony of itself, no more than any other testimony , would be conclusive ; and where the record shows, as it does here , that the respondent has engaged in unfair labor prac- tices and that the effects of such unfair labor practices have not been dissipated, such testimony deserves little or no weight. 2a Cf. National Labor Relations Board v. Stackpole Carbon Company , 105 F. ( 2d) 167 (C. C. A. 3d), cert. den'd 308 U. S. 605+. 21 Cf. National Labor Relations Board Y. Arthur L. Colten., etc., 105 F . (2d) 179 (C. C. A. 6th) ; National Labor Relations Board v . American Manufacturing Co., 106 F. ( 2d) 61 (C. C. A. 2d). WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 33 Shortly after we certified Local No. 3, the respondent and a com- mittee representing Local No. 3 engaged in a series of bargaining con- ferences, pursuant to the respondent's invitation. Both the respond- ent and the union committee submitted and discussed written pro-' posals but a meeting of the minds was not reached. The respondent presented as its final offer a document hereinafter referred to as Respondent Exhibit No. 2-B. Local No. 3 rejected this proposal but did not close the door to further negotiation. Neither did the respond- ent close the door to further negotiation although it termed Respond- ent Exhibit No. 2-B its final offer. These bargaining conferences had taken place during November and the early part of December 1937. The plant -had. not been in operation since October 28, 1937. The respondent decided to reopen the plant, effective December 16, under the conditions of work set forth in Respondent Exhibit No. 2-B. On December 15 the respond- ent delivered to Local No. 3 a letter which stated that the respondent recognized Local No. 3 "as the agency designated under the agree- ment submitted." 22 In exchange therefor Local No. 3 agreed not to hinder the return to work of its members who were employed by the respondent. Local No. 3, however, did not execute or otherwise accept. Respondent Exhibit No. 2-B. Pursuant to the notice posted by the respondent, its employees resumed work on December 16, 1937.223 On March 11 or 15, 1938, Local No. 3 met with and submitted to the respondent a proposed contract coupled with a request for collective bargaining negotiations. At about the same time Local No. 3 served similar requests upon a number of other lumber sawmill companies in the Portland region. At first the lumber companies held a meeting among themselves and planned to confer separately with Local No. 3. At their following meeting, however, they decided to participate in joint negotiations with Local No. 3. The companies appointed a ne- gotiating committee to deal with a similar committee representing Local No. 3 and the two committees held their initial joint conference on March 31. 'The two committees continued to meet in joint negotia- tions during April and May. The companies' committee was author- ized to represent the respondent at the conferences 24 and A. E. McIntosh was an alternate delegate to the companies' committee. 22 The respondent inserted a similar clause in its notice of reopening. The document referred to as the "agreement submitted " is Respondent Exhibit No . 2--B which the respondent had submitted to Local No . 3 and which Local No . 3 had rejected. 'a The record contains evidence with respect to the terms of the notice of reopening, the reaction of union member employees to these terms, and conferences between the respondent and the plant committee of Local No. 3 concerning these terms . Whether or not the respondent refused to bargain collectively with Local No. 3 can be determined. without detailed reference to this evidence. 24 The committee was not authorized to bind the respondent or any of the other com- panies it represented . The committee of the union was not authorized to bind Local No. 3._ 34 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Following the collective bargaining demand of Local No. 3 on the respondent between March 11 and March 15, and during the joint bargaining conferences in which the respondent participated, the respondent was engaging in the unfair labor practices which we have described above in Section III B. On or about May 11, Local No. 2532 demanded recognition as the exclusive representative of the respondent's employees. Upon learn. ing of this demand, A. E. McIntosh made the following announce- ment : It looks like as if I will have to break off negotiations with the C. I. O. and that the A. F. of L. can substitute their claims. It looks like I will have to begin bargaining with them. Thus the respondent announced its intention of recognizing Local No. 2532 as the exclusive collective bargaining agency for the re- spondent's employees. The evidence shows further that the respond- ent did recognize Local No. 2532 at this time. Kenneth McIntosh testified in this connection as follows : Q... .. Did you at that time enter into negotiations and con- versations with them as the bargaining agency for your plant? A. I did. Q. You did? A. Yes. On or about May 13 the respondent withdrew from the joint con- ferences. The companies' committee informed Local No. 3 that it was no longer authorized to represent the respondent and A. E. McIntosh was no longer an alternate member of the committee. By letter dated May 18, Local No. 3 called the respondent's attention to the notice which it had received from the companies' committee, re- quested collective bargaining negotiations with the respondent, recom- mended May 19 for the initial meeting, and asked to be notified "immediately of your acceptance or rejection." Kenneth McIntosh replied by a letter dated May 19, stating that he would refer the request to A. E. McIntosh upon the latter's return from California about June 1. Local No. 3 renewed its request by letter dated May 31, and called for an answer by June 2, "stating where these negotia- tions will take place." A. E. McIntosh, in a letter dated June 2, referred to "recent developments at this plant including the Labor Board hearing" and the claim of Local No. 2532 to be the new collective bargaining agent, then concluded as follows : Under the circumstances as outlined above, we feel sure that you will understand and will afford sympathetic consideration to the quandry, in which we find ourselves. We are taking the liberty of assuming that you do not wish to add further complications WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 35 to our already highly involved labor relations; and that upon more mature consideration you will withdraw your request for negotiation, at least until such time as circumstances affecting the relations between this plant and the employees are clarified. We would appreciate your assurances in this regard. On June 13, upon additional charges filed by Local No. 3, the Board amended its complaint to allege a refusal to bargain on and after December 15, 1937, and May 13, 1938, respectively. The respondent took no steps to comply with the collective bargaining demand of Local No. 3. On June 27, Local No. 2532 requested a collective bargaining con- ference. Pursuant thereto a meeting was held with the respondent on June 29. At this conference Local No. 2532 demanded a closed- shop contract. A. E. McIntosh asked for time in which to consider the demand. On the following day, June 30, he informed Local No. 2532 that he desired further proof of majority representation.25 4 On July 5 Local No. 2532 began to picket the plant. The plant did not operate that day or the following day.26 On July 6 in the morning A. E. McIntosh assured Local No. 3 that he had no inten- tion of executing any contract with Local No. 2532. That afternoon he met with Local No. 2532. The negotiations consumed somewhat under 2 hours. There was no disagreement with respect to the sub- stance of Local No. 2532's proposed contract. After considering the proof of majority offered by Local No. 2532,27 and after making some changes in the union's draft, the respondent executed the contract. The parties to the agreement as executed are the respondent and Local No. 2532. By this contract the respondent agreed : (1) to recognize Local No. 2532 as the exclusive representative of its em- ployees;" (2) to employ only (a) members in good standing of Local No. 2532 and (b) persons who agree to become members thereof, who ,are acceptable to Local No. 2532, who are satisfactory to the respondent and to Local No. 2532 after a reasonable period, and who thereupon become members of Local No. 2532; and (3) to commence negotiations expeditiously for the purpose of determining wages, hours of work, and other conditions of employment. This agreement contains no other provisions with respect to wages, hours of work, and other conditions of employment. 25 The proof offered at the conference on June 29 included claimed memberships and the petitions which were circulated with the assistance of the respondent . We have found above that these represent the respondent ' s coercion and do not constitute valid proof of majority ( Section III, C 2). 26 On July 6 Local No. 3 offered its aid to A. E. McIntosh in restarting the plaint. A. E. McIntosh declined such aid on the ground that it was not feasible'to operate the plant because of the Carpenters ' picket line. 27 The proof of majority offered by Local No. 2532 at the .Iuly 6 conference included the petitions and the affidavits . We have found above that these represent the respondent's coercion and do not constitute valid proof of majority ( Section III, C 2). 36 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD The plant reopened under the contract with Local No. 2532 on July 7. Local No. 3 established a picket line and secured the as- sistance of the longshoremen's union. Shortly thereafter Local No. 3 demanded reinstatement for its members against whom the respond- ent had allegedly discriminated. Local No. 3 also advised the re- spondent not to enforce the contract dated July 6. The respondent replied that the contract was in effect and that the respondent would abide by the Board's determination of the agreement's validity. On or about July 20, the plant shut down because of the refusal by the longshoremen to load cargo for the respondent. On August 15 the plant reopened under the terms of an agreement between the interested parties, whereby a truce was arranged pending our determination of the issues in these cases.28 (b) Concluding findings The selection of Local No. 3 by a majority of the respondent's eln- ployees in an appropriate unit from about March 11, 1938, to about May 11, 1938, is unchallenged by the respondent. But while the re- spondent met with Local No. 3 during this period, the respondent was engaged in unfair labor practices in an effort to destroy the majority designation of Local No. 3 and thereby to undermine the very negotiations in which it purported to participate. Under these. circumstances it can hardly be contended that the respondent was making a bona fide attempt to reach a collective bargaining under- standing with Local No. 3. The respondent's campaign .to cut the ground from under Local No. 3 was as patently a refusal to bargain as a forthright refusal to meet with the exclusive bargaining agent. Conduct so inconsistent with the requirements of genuine collective bargaining constitutes a refusal to bargain within the meaning of Section 8 (5).29 On and after May 13. the respondent refused to meet with Local No. 3 in collective bargaining conferences. A. E. McIntosh testified that the respondent withdrew from the joint conferences at the re- quest of the other participating companies, that it thought the re- quest to withdraw really stemmed from Local No. 3, and that it 28 The agents of the Board suggested that : ( 1) Local No . 3 withdraw its picket line so that "normal operations " could continue , and (2 ) Local No . 2532 permit the rehiring of all regular employees who were on the pay roll on June 30, 1938 , without regard to union affiliation , then permit the rehiring of regular employees , who were on the pay roll prior to June 30, 1938 , as required , in the order of seniority , and without regard to union affiliation . Local No . 3 agreed to withdraw its picket line so long as its members were not discriminated against. Local No. 2532 agreed not to compel the respondent to enforce the closed -shop contract with respect to employees who were not members of Local No. 2532 on or before June 30 or "not now" members thereof . The respondent agreed to "be guided" by the above program. 29 Matter of Chicago Apparatus Company and Federation of Architects, Engineers, Chemists and Technicians , Local 107, 12 N. L. R. B. 1002. WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 37 learned only later that Local N. 3 had not sought the retirement of the respondent from the joint negotiations. This testimony is in- credible in view of the respondent's announcement at this time that it would have to break off negotiations with Local No., 3 and bargain with Local No. 2532 and in view of the respondent's recognition of Local No. 2532 as the bargaining agent at this time. The record shows, moreover, a clear refusal to meet with Local No. 3 for collec- tive bargaining purposes after May 13. Local No. 3 persisted in demanding collective bargaining negotiations. Its letter of May 31 asked for an answer, within a limited period- of time, which would set time and place for the meetings. Instead of complying with this unequivocal demand, the respondent requested assurances from Local No. 3 that Local No. 3 was withdrawing the demand. This reply was in effect a refusal to negotiate with Local No. 3. Local No. 3 treated the reply as a refusal by requesting the Board to issue its amended complaint in these cases. The respondent concurred in the construction that its letter of June 2 was a refusal to meet with Local No. 3 for bargaining purposes by not setting any time and place or making any other effort to comply with the demands of Local No. 3 for collective bargaining negotiations. Finally, the un- equivocal meaning of the exclusive representation and closed-shop contract, dated July 6, with Local No. 2532, was that the respondent would not engage in collective bargaining negotiations with Local No. 3. The respondent's letter of June 2 to Local No. 3 raises the claim that the respondent did not desire to negotiate with Local No. 3 while a Board hearing was. current, and while the respondent's labor re- lations were "highly involved." We cannot accept the bona fides of this claim, since, the respondent signed the exclusive representation and closed-shop contract with Local No. 2532 on July 6, while Local No. 3 still asserted that it was the exclusive representative, before w& issued any decision, and before the "highly involved" labor relations of the respondent were otherwise clarified. Furthermore, were the respondent's claim sincere it would never- theless not constitute a valid defense. Complex labor relations do not excuse the obligation of Section 8 (5). Rather, they render col- lective bargaining with the true representative even more imperative. Moreover, we perceive no ground for holding that the mere currency of the Board hearing in this case postpones an employer's obligation to bargain with the exclusive representative.30 The respondent's letter of June 2 also raises the claim that the respondent did not desire to negotiate with Local No. 3 while a rival 30 Cf. Matter of Sheba Ann Frocks, Inc. and International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union of America, etc., 5 N . L. R. B. 12. 283031-41--rol. 20-4 38 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD union was claiming to be the exclusive representative. Local No. 3 was the exclusive representative at all times after October 21, 1937. Yet its rival claim did not dissuade the respondent from executing the closed-shop contract with the company-assisted Local No. 2532.' Besides the respondent must have been aware of the, fact that the ostensible defections from Local No. 3 were in' reality responses to the respondent's unfair labor practices and not genuine withdrawals of authority from Local No. 3. Company-coerced revocations ob= viously cannot create an honest doubt that such revocations are genuine. Further, the record is clear that even if the respondent had any doubts that Local No. 3 remained the selection of a majority within Section 9 (a), such doubts were not the true basis for the respondent's refusal to negotiate with Local No. 3. The respondent refused to negotiate with Local No. 3 on and after May 13 because the respondent was intent on completing its program of assistance to Local No. 2532 and on taking the logical step of recognizing Local No. 2532. Finally, the respondent's actions were inconsistent with any asserted willingness to resolve any asserted honest doubt. By recognizing Local No. 2532 on or about May 11 and by executing 'the exclusive representation, closed-shop contract on July 6, the respondent announced its firm intention to have nothing to do with Local No. 3 and precluded all further attempts on the part of that union to secure the recognition to which it was entitled. We con- clude that no question with respect to majority status excused the respondent's refusal to negotiate with Local No. 3 on and after May 13.31 As we have already found, the respondent recognized Local No. 2532 as the bargaining agent on or about May 11 and executed an exclusive representation, closed-shop contract with that organization on July 6 although Local No. 3 was the true exclusive representative within Section 9 (a) at this time and actively asserting its rights as such representative. 'By thus dealing with Local No.' 2532, the re- spondent violated its duty to respect the exclusive quality of Local No. 3's representation and thereby infringed its duty to bargain only with Local No. 3., The Supreme Court of the United States in con- struing an employer's obligation to bargain under the Railway Labor Act stated the following : The "obligation imposed on the employer .. .. to treat with the true representative of the employees as des- ignated by the Mediation Board . . is exclusive. It imposes the affirmative duty to treat only with the true representative, and hence the negative duty to treat with no other." 32 The Supreme Court nNational Labor Relations Board v. National Motor Bearing Company, 105 F. (2d) 652 (C. C. A. 9th) ; National Labor Relations Board v. Remington-Rand, Inc., 94 F. (2d) 862 ((. C. A. 2d), cert. den'd 304 U. S. 576, 585; Cf. National Labor Relations Board v. Biles-Coleman Lumber Co., 98 F. (2d) 18 (C. C. A. 9th). ai The Virginian Railway Company v. System Federation, 300 U. S. 515. WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 39 held this language applicable to the National Labor Relations Act in National Labor Relations Board v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp.33 Thus the respondent refused to bargain collectively within the meaning of Section 8 (5) because it committed unfair labor practices calculated to dissipate the majority of Local No. 3 and thereby manifested its unwillingness to bargain collectively with Local No. 3 in good faith, because it refused to meet with Local No. 3 for col- lective bargaining purposes, because it recognized Local No. 2532 aas the bargaining agent, and because it executed the contract dated July 6 with Local No. 2532. Local No. 3 made its initial request to bargain in.1938, on March 11 or on March 15. The respondent announced its policy of discrimination, through Kenneth McIntosh, in the course of the conference at which this initial request was made. Accordingly, the respondent's refusal to bargain dates from March 11 or March 15. Thereafter Local No. 3 repeated its request and never withdrew it. The respondent's refusal to bargain was a con- tinuing refusal. The respondent has not yet withdrawn such refusal. Accordingly, we find that on March 11, or on March 15, 1938, and at all times thereafter, the respondent refused and has continued to refuse to bargain collectively with Local No. 3 as the exclusive representative of its employees in an appropriate unit, and that the respondent has thereby interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act. Since the contract dated July 6 is with the company-assisted. Local No. 2532 in which membership was coerced by the respondent, it is clear that such agreement represents the fruit of the respondent's unfair labor practices, a device to perpetuate their effects, and a convenient cover under which to continue the respondent's discrimi- nation against Local No. 3. Moreover, the contract did not tend to stabilize labor relations. Indeed, it contained no substantive provi- sions with respect to conditions of employment other than that requiring membership in Local No. 2532. We find that Local No. 2532 was maintained and assisted by unfair labor practices and was not the representative of the employees within the meaning of Sec- tion 9 (a). We find therefore that the contract between the respond- ent and Local No. 2532 is not covered by the proviso to Section 8 (3). Accordingly, we find that by the contract dated July 6, 1938, the respondent interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in their exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7.34 33 301 U. S. 1. 94 National Labor Relations Board v. National Motor Bearing Company, 105 F. (2d) 652 (C. C. A. 9th) ; Matter o f National Electric Products Corporation and United Electrical and Radio Workers of America, etc., 3 N. L. it. B. 475. 40 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD D. D'ischcdrges and refusals to reinstate on and after April 7, 1938 On March 18, 1938, the respondent employed about 345 persons. Following the shut-down commencing on that date, the respondent reopened the plant on April 7, 1938, and continued to expand its personnel thereafter. By September 1, 1938, the respondent was employing about 310 persons.35 The complaint alleges and the answer denies that upon and after this reopening of the plant the respondent discriminatorily dis- charged and refused to reinstate 73 named employees, hereinafter sometimes referred to as charging employees. Eleven charging employees did not testify with respect to these allegations.36 Seven of these eleven charging employees joined Local No. 2532 and subsequently were reinstated 31 Of the remaining four, two were reinstated'38 and two apparently were not reinstated3° Thus 62 charging employees testified with respect to the allega- tions of discrimination against them upon and after the reopening of the plant. From the testimony of Hisakichi Koike, a charging employee, it appears that he was reinstated on or about April 11 but that he left the respondent's employment and was not discharged. We are also unable to find that the respondent discriminatorily delayed the reinstatement of Charles Mack and Donald Park, charg- ing employees.4.0 Mack's last period,; of =service with the respondent dated only from the end of 1937. Mack was reinstated on May 23 and he admitted that he was not discriminated against on the basis of seniority.4' Donald Park was reinstated on May 5 to the position which he held on March 18. This position was the only one of its kind at the plant and it does not appear that it was regularly filled until May 5, the day of Park's reinstatement to it. The credible evidence shows that on various dates on and after April 7 the respondent discriminated in regard to the hire and tenure and terms and conditions of employment of the remaining 59 charging employees.42 The discrimination consisted in delayed reinstatements, refusals to reinstate, and discharges. We shall first 36 The Mclntoshes testified that operation of the plant at maximum efficiency does not require the emplryment of as many persons as were on the pay roll on March 18. 16 Their names are listed in Appendix "C." 31 J. C. Durgin, W. Hoffman , J. Houseman , W. Lomnicky , R. L. Sims , R. Ward, and M. Hobigal ( Hobizal). F. G. Anderson and H. E. Clark. $0 E. Somnerfelt and E . Lingle. Lingle was too ill to testify . Leslie James testified with, respect to the allegations of discrimination against Lingle. 40 Koike , Mack, and Park are named in Appendix "C." 41 Mack testified that he would have . been reinstated at an earlier date had due regard been given to the criterion of efficiency . The record , however , does not permit of a com- parison between his efficiency and that of others who were reinstated prior to May 23. "Their names are listed in Appendix "A" and in Appendix "B." e WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 41 discuss the employment history 43 and union activity. 44 of, and various specific defenses in connection with, each of the 59 charging em- ployees and then in a separate subdivision discuss the affirmative proof of discrimination and the evidence common to all 59 charging employees. 1. Employment history; union activity (a) Delayed reinstatement of 8 employees and refusal to reinstate 5 employees on the green chain Jihachi Shirota, Don (Yoshiomi) Hashiguchi, Tohei Asanuraa, Kohachi Itoarza, Ryoheie Fukuyama, Frank Murazen, Ti Kashahara, Fred I. Kokubu, Kiniehi Suzuki, Koshiro Hammamura, Kunimitsu Shori, Tom Arai, Yoshisuke Oba. On March 18, 1938, the date the plant shut down, these 13 charging employees were employed during the day shift Qn an operation called the green chain. The day-shift green chain resumed on April 11, 1938, and it acquired a full crew within a few days. The positions occupied by these 13 charging employees were filled on or about April 11 by employees who for the most part had been employed on the green chain during the night shift on March 18. The night shift did not resume until May 23. Eight of these 13 charging employees were reinstated on or about May 23, 1938.'' The other five have not been reinstated.41, At the time of the shut-down, commencing March 18,E the 13 charging employees received 65 cents per hour. The 13 charging employees were members of Local No. 3 and were not members of Local No. 2532 on or about April 11, 1938. The employees were selected for reinstatement to the green chain on or about April 11 by Frank Onishi and Hisakichi Koike. During the shut-down commencing March 18, Onishi and Koike had affiliated with Local No. 2532 and had procured employees to sign cards applying for membership in that organization. Onishi testified that in selecting persons for reinstatement to the green chain on or about 13 In Section III, D , 1. we use the term seniority to refer to the last period, of service of an employee with the respondent , without regard to service in any particular depart- ment , unless we specify otherwise . Respondent Exhibit No . 18 and Petitioner Exhibit No. 6, both prepared by the respondent , purport to show the seniority of many employees. Unless contradicted by specific and credible testimony , the seniority standing shown by these documents is accepted as correct in this Decision. 44 The statements by various supervisory employees with respect to union membership or activity , which are cited in Section III, D , 1, are taken from the credible testimony of charging employees . On the witness stand, supervisory employes directly or indirectly denied having made a number of these statements . On this record, however , we cannot credit such denials. 45 The following were reinstated on the dates shown : Shirota , Hashiguchi , Kasahara , Hammamura , Short , Arai-May 23, 1938; Suzuki-May 25, 1938; Kokubu-June 6, 1938. 46 Asanuma , Itoama , Fukuyama , Murazen, Oba. 0 42 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD April 11 he and Koike were guided by the desire to secure a crew whose members could work harmoniously. From Onishi's testi- mony it is clear that the criterion of selection employed by Onishi and Koike was membership in Local No. 2532 and non-membership in Local No. 3. Thus Onishi testified : "If we would pick fellows from the C. I. O. and put them right on the A. F. of L. crew, why,. it would cause trouble. You see, they wouldn't be able to work smoothly." He testified further that the Japanese employees dis- cussed the matter and concluded that it was best "not to mix the unions up." He also testified that the members of Local No. 2532 did not wish to work along with members of Local No. 3, and that accordingly he did not "mix the unions up"" in selecting the persons to be{ reinstated to the green chain. Of the 16 persons shown by Respondent Exhibit No. 18 to have been employed on the green chain on or about April 11, 14 were members of Local No., 2532 at the time they were reinstated. The fifteenth and sixteenth, M. Akijama and K. Iwasa, were reinstated on April 11, and the date of their joining Local No. 2532 is given as April 15 by Petitioner Exhibit No. 3-C. Apart from Onishi's testimony the record does not show that mem- bers of Local No. 3 and members of Local No. 2532 could not co- operate when working alongside each other. On or about April 11 some members of Local No. 3 were reinstated to positions alongside members of Local No. 2532 in divisions of the plant other than the green chain, and on May 23 members of both organizations were employed to work alongside each other on the green chain, although rivalry between the two organizations continued. (b) Discharge of four employees subsequent to their reinstatement Saki Hokamura. Hokamura was hired by the respondent on Sep- tember 16, 1936. On March 18 he was employed on the green chain and he received 65 cents an hour. He; was laid off on March 18. Hokamura was reinstated to the green chain on April 11 but was discharged on the following day. He has not been reinstated. Hokamura joined Local No. 2532 on April 7 and reaffiliated with Local No. 3 on April 12, the date of his discharge. Hokamura testified that Onishi, in discharging him, stated that he was dis- charged because of his reaffiliation with Local No. 3. Onishi testified that he discharged Hokamura because Hokamura was inefficient. In this connection Onishi testified that in 1937 Hokamura was a member of the crew of which Onishi was the supervisor and that during this period Onishi discovered that Hoka- mura was inefficient. At that time Koike transferred Hokamura from Onishi's crew, which worked during the night shift, to Koike's crew which worked during the day shift. Onishi quoted Koike as WEST OREGON, LUMBER COMPANY 43. having said that Hokamura was inefficient. Koike, however, as- serted on the witness stand that Hokamura was efficient. Onishi's testimony with respect to Hokamura's inefficiency was vague and unconvincing. Hokamura had been employed by the respondent since September 16, 1936. He continued to be employed by the respondent subsequent to the time that Onishi claims he discovered Hokamura's inefficiency. Furthermore, Hokamura was reinstated on April 11 when other persons employed on the green chain on March 18, who were admittedly, efficient, were not reinstated. More- over, Hokamura was discharged only 1 day after his reinstatement. and there is nothing in the record to show that he did not perform his work efficiently on that day. Finally, it will be recalled that on or about April 11 Onishi's criterion for employment on the green chain was membership in Local No. 2532, and that Hokamura changed.back from Local No. 2532 to Local No. 3 on the date of his. discharge. Accordingly we do not credit Onishi's testimony that Hokamura was discharged because of inefficiency and we do credit -Hokamura's testimony and find that Onishi stated that he was dis- charging Hokamura because of the latter's reaffiliation with Local No. 3. George Jacobs. Jacobs was hired by the respondent on April 22,. 1935. On March 18 he operated a band ripsaw and he received 671/2 cents an hour. Jacobs was laid off on March 18. When the band ripsaw was placed in operation again on April 19, 1938, Jacobs was. reinstated to his former position. He was discharged 2 days later and has not been reinstated. Jacobs was a member of Local No. 3. We have already described above the circumstances leading to the discharge of Jacobs on April 21. On April 20, the day following Jacobs' reinstatement, Aldridge and Hinckle asked Jacobs to join Local No. 2532. This solicitation occurred in the plant and during working hours. Jacobs refused. After leaving Jacobs, Aldridge and Hinckle approached Foreman Anderson and spoke to him for about half an hour. On April 21 Anderson notified Jacobs that he had received orders from the office to lay Jacobs off. On April 25 Jacobs applied to Foreman Bennett for reinstatement. Bennett exhibited a list of names to Jacobs and stated : "They are all A. F. of L. men on there but one." 47 About a week later Jacobs again applied to Foreman Bennett for reinstate- ment. Bennett stated to Jacobs : "You know as well as I do why you are not getting a job." The position from which Jacobs was discharged was given to E. Rosini. Rosini joined Local No. 2532 in order to procure reinstate- 4' The single employee was identified as Tony Kitrina . Kitrina was discharged on April 25. Kitrina is one of the charging employees and his case follows that of Jacobs. .44 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD ment. On May 16 Rosini was transferred to another position and the position of band-ripsaw operator was given to J. C. Durgin.41 Durgin had applied for membership in Local No . 2532 on April 28, and on May 16, the day of"his reinstatement , he accepted the obliga- tions of membership in that organization . On May 23 Durgin was transferred to another position and C. L. Broome became the band- ripsaw operator. Tony Kitrina. Kitrina was hired by the respondent in 1927. On March 18 he was employed as a sorter of dry lumber and he received 621/2 cents an hour. He was laid off on March 18. He worked for half an hour on April 25 and was then discharged. He had not been reinstated by June 13 , 1938, the day he testified in these cases. It ilppears from Kenneth McIntosh 's testimony that he was subsequently reinstated. Kitrina was a member of Local No. 3, and he refused to become a member of Local No . 2532, although requested to do so by one of the foremen. We have already set forth the facts with respect to Kitrina's dis- charge on April 25. Kitrina had applied for reinstatement and had been given employment on April 25. He was discharged, however, tit the end of half an hour. In the words of Kitrina , Wilkinson had told Bennett "that if he [sic] didn 't sign over to A. F . of L., he would send me home ." The respondent reinstated John Kostrba to the position from which Kitrina was discharged. Kostrba had become a member of Local No. 2532 prior to such reinstatement. After the plant reopened the respondent discontinued the sorting of dry lumber and substituted therefor the sorting of green lumber. Kitrina had greater seniority than several employees who were given positions as sorters of green lumber on and after April 18 and who became members of Local No. 2532 prior to such reinstatement. Some of these employees had been sorters of dry lumber. Others of these employees had filled various other positions prior to March 18. Jphn Hamlin. Hamlin was hired by the respondent in February or March 1937 . On March 18 he operated the line vertical resaw during the night shift , and he received 65 cents an hour. He was laid off on March 18 and he was reinstated on April 14. Thereafter he was laid off on April 25. He has not been reinstated. On March 18 Hamlin affiliated with Local No. 3. On April 4 he signed a card for Local No. 2532 but on the following day he re- affiliated with Local No. 3. Following his reinstatement on April 14 he failed to wear an A. F. of L. button. On the Thursday or Fri- day preceding his discharge on April 25 he was asked by Charles Olds, a fellow employee, whether he belonged to Local No. 3 or Local 48 Durgin is one of the charging employees who did not testify in these cases. WEST ORECUUN. LUMBER COMPANY 45 No. 2532. Hamlin pulled his sweater back and stated , "That is what I am." On his sweater was a C. I. O. button. At this time both A. F. of L . and C. I. O. buttons were being worn in the plant. On April 25 Foreman McKay informed Hamlin that the superintendent had instructed McKay to lay Hamlin off so that Hamlin's position could be given to an employee who had greater seniority than Hamlin in that position. On May 23 the position which Hamlin had occupied prior to the commencement of the shut-down was given to W. M . Marquis. Prior to the commencement of the shut-down Marquis had occupied the position of horizontal resawyer and this position had been discon- tinued by the respondent . Marquis had less seniority than Hamlin, and he became a, member of Local No. 2532 during the shut-down and prior to his reinstatement. (c) Delayed reinstatement-reinstatement of Demarinis on April 21 Vito Demarinis . Demarinis began to work for the respondent about June 1935 or 1936. On March 18 Demarinis was a lumber handler classified as a shed worker in Foreman Gallagher's depart- ment and he received 65 cents an hour. He was laid off on March 18. Demarinis was reinstated on or about April 21. Demarinis was a member of Local No. 3 prior to the shut-down. Employees in Gallagher 's department began to work on April 7. On April 6 or 7, pursuant to the solicitation of Foreman Gallagher, De- marinis signed a card applying for membership in Local No. 2532. At this time , however, Demarinis did not go to the Labor Temple to assume the obligations of membership in Local No. 2532. Gallagher summoned other employees in his department to return to work but Demarinis was not included among them . Having failed to receive employment Demarinis applied to Gallagher for reinstatement. In substance , Gallagher informed Demarinis that he could return to work if he obtained membership in Local No. 2532. Demarinis joined Local No. 2532'9 and on the following day he returned to work. On the witness stand Gallagher characterized Demarinis as a "very good" worker. Demarinis had seniority over other employees who were reinstated to various positions before April 21, 1938, and subse- quent to their affiliation with Local No. 2532. (d) Delayed reinstatement-reinstatement of Kuehn on May 9 William Kuehn . Kuehn was hired by the respondent on March 16, 1936. On March 18 Kuehn was a carrier driver during the night shift and he received 721/ cents an hour. Kuehn was laid, off on 4° On the witness stand Demarinis asserted that he had since reafliliated with Loca' No. 3. 46 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD March 18. On May 9 he was reinstated to the position of carrier driver during the day shift.' Kuehn was a member of Local No. 3 and he refused to join Local No. 2532, although requested to do so during the shut-down by Fore- man McKay. Kuehn testified as follows in connection with his re- instatement to the position of carrier driver : Q. Was anyone put on driving the carrier . . . that shouldn't have been put on ahead of you ... ? A. No. From Kuehn's further testimony, however, it appears that prior to the shut-down Kuehn had been employed at a number of tasks other than that of carrier driving. On a prior occasion when the respond- ent did not need carrier drivers during the night shift' the respondent transferred Kuehn to .a different position. Kuehn had greater senior- ity than several employees who were reinstated to various positions before he was. The facts with respect to the employment of the tractor driver and the truck drivers, which we have set forth in discussing the respond- ent's failure to reinstate Nordyke, are also relevant to the allegations of discrimination against Kuehn. (e) Delayed reinstatement-reinstatement of six employees on May 23 10 Joe Ilias. Ilias has been employed by the respondent since Decem- ber 10, 1934. His work was subjected only to an.occasional criticism and such criticism as was made occurred when he first started to work for the respondent and not thereafter. On March 18 Ilias was em- ployed during the day shift on an operation known as the gang line-up and he received 65 cents an hour. He was laid off when the plant shut down on March 18. When the night shift reopened on May 23 the respondent reinstated Ilias to the position which he occupied prior to the commencement of the shut-down. Ilias was a member of Local No. 3 and he refused a number of re- quests that he join Local No. 2532. The position which Ilias occupied on March 18 was not filled until April 25. At that time it was given to John Novak. On May 4 Novak was transferred to another position and Ilias' position given to C. W. Brower. On May 23 Brower was transferred to another posi- tion and Ilias reinstated to the position occupied by him on March 18. Novak and Brower joined Local No. 2532 prior to their reinstatement. The position which Novak had occupied on March 18 was dis- continued when the plant reopened. According to Respondent 50 The original complaint was issued on May 16, 1938. WEST 'ORE'G'O'N, LUMBER COMPANY1 11 =Exhibit No. 18, Novak was first employed by the respondent on September 4, 1934, or about 3 months prior to Ilias. Kenneth Mc- Intosh testified, however, that he did not know whether or not Novak had interrupted his service with the respondent in the spring ,of 1937. Brower was first hired by the respondent on July 15, 1936, a year and a half after Ilias. On March 18 Brower was foreman of the sawmill department during the day shift. When that de- partment reopened on April 11, the foreman of the sawmill depart- mnent during the night shift became the foreman of that department for the day shift. Brower testified in this connection that the sub stitution occurred because the former night-shift foreman had greater seniority than he. Brower, however, expected to and did become foreman of the sawmill department on the night shift when that shift resumed on May 23. The record shows that Ilias had greater. seniority than other per- sons who were reinstated to various positions before April 25 and subsequent to their affiliation with Local No. 2532. R. L. Bell. Bell was first hired by the respondent in January 1936. He left the respondent's employment about 10 days later and returned to work for the respondent on June 11, 1936. On March 18 Bell was classified as a shop mechanic. From Bell's testimony it .appears that he did millwright, blacksmith, and machinist work and that he received 871/2 cents an hour. Bell was laid off when the plant shut down on March 18. He was reinstated to the position of shop mechanic on May 23. Bell was a member of Local No. 3 and he refused to join Local No. 2532 although requested to do so during the shut-down by Foreman Lansberry. On April 11 Bell applied to Lansberry for reinstatement. Lansberry replied : "You see what the rest of the boys have done." On one occasion thereafter Bell spoke to Mc- Nerlen, identified as a minor supervisory employee and as an active solicitor on behalf of Local No. 2532, in the millwright department during the night shift. McNerlen stated, in substance, to Bell: "Why don't you get wise and go sign up?" Bell, however, refused to join Local No. 2532. On April 9 Hinmers, formerly an oiler, was reinstated to the position of millwright helper and on April 11 W. Zimmerman, formerly a slasher, was reinstated to the newly created position of labor millwright. Both Hinmers and Zimmerman had less seniority than Bell. As we point out in our discussion of the allegations with respect to Richard Perkins, both Hinmers and Zimmerman were members of Local No. 2532 when they were reinstated' to their respective positions. C. L. Broome. Broome was hired by the respondent in October 1927. On March 18 Broome operated the pony edger and he received 48 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 671/2 cents an hour. He was laid off on March 18. Broome's posi- tion was discontinued when the plant reopened . On May 23 Broome was reinstated to the position of band-ripsaw operator. Broome was a member of Local No. 3 and he refused to become a member of Local No. 2532, although requested to do so during the shut-down by Foreman McKay and by McNerlen. Broome had greater seniority than other employees who were reinstated to various positions before May 23 and subsequent to their affiliation with Local No. 2532. Willijam F. Theis. Theis was hired by the respondent on July 18, 1923. On March 18 he was employed as a garage mechanic and he received 771/2 cents an hour. Theis was laid off a few days after the plant shut down on March 18. When the position of garage mechanic was reopened by the respondent on May 23 Theis was reinstated to it. - We have already described the substance of a conversation which Kenneth McIntosh had with Theis on or about April 11. McIntosh questioned Theis about his union affiliation and asked him whether membership in Local No. 2532 would not be an improvement. Theis replied that it would not be and McIntosh asked him for his reasons. From McIntosh's statements during the conversation Theis under- stood that he would not be reinstated unless he joined Local No. 2532. Theis asked McIntosh whether this understanding was cor- rect. and McIntosh replied substantially as follows: "I wouldn't make a statement of that kind , but there are some of the, men that are never going to get back and you may be one of then." Theis had greater seniority than other employees who were rein- stated to various positions before May 23 and subsequent to their affiliation with Local No. 2532. Sam Dragovich. Dragovich was hired by the respondent on Sep- tember 23 , 1932. On March 18 he was a dry -lumber unloader and he received 65 cents an hour. He was laid off on March 18 and on May 23 he was reinstated to the corresponding position of green- lumber unloader. Dragovich was a member of Local No . 3. On one occasion after April 18 Dragovich applied to Foreman Bennett for reinstatement. Bennett told him in substance : "You got to go down to the Labor Temple and come back and see Wilkinson ." Dragovich , however, did not Join Local No. 2532. After the plant reopened the respondent transformed the dry- lumber section into a green-lumber section. From April 18 to May 23 the position of green-lumber unloader was held by L. A. Reinikka . 51 Dragovich had greater seniority than Reinikka and m On May 23 Reinikka was transferred to another position. WEST OREGON LUDIBER COMPANY 49 Reinikka was a member of Local No. 2532 at the time of his rein- statement. Dragovich also had seniority over other employees re- instated on or about April 18 and thereafter to positions involving the handling of green lumber. A number of employees so reinstated became members of Local No. 2532 prior to their reinstatement. George R. Moore. Moore was hired by the respondent on April 13, 1937. On March 18 he operated the pull resaw during the night shift and he received 65 cents an hour. Moore was laid off on March 1.8. His former position was discontinued by the respondent on the reopening of the plant, and he was reinstated on May 23 to the posi- tion of slasher. Moore was affiliated with Local, No. 3. He had, greater seniority than other employees who, were reinstated to var- ious positions before May 23 and subsequent to their affiliation with Local No. 2532. (f) Delayed reinstatement-reinstatement of five employees subsequent to May 23 Rene J. Lorette. Lorette was hired by the respondent on April 20, 1936. On March 18 Lorette operated a machine known as the off-bearer trimmer during the day shift and he received 65 cents an hour. Lorette was laid off on March 18. On May 27 Lorette was reinstated as an operator of the off-bearer trimmer during the night shift. Lorette was a member of Local No. 3. On or about April 2 Fore- man McKay asked him to join Local No. 2532. Lorette refused and McKay stated : "All right, if you want to have it that way, let it go that way and have the C. I. O. pay your bill." The following Saturday McKay asked Lorette whether Lorette had changed his mind. Lorette replied in the negative. Thereupon McKay stated to him, "If you don't want to work, it is up to you." On April 11 McKay told Lorette that the respondent could not use Lorette's services as yet. That day the position which Lorette had filled on March 18 was given to T. W. Stoppelcamp, an employee who, prior to the commencement of the shut-down, had operated the off-bearer trimmer during the night shift. Stoppelcamp was hired by the respondent 3 weeks before Lorette. Stoppelcamp joined Local No. 2532 on April 2, that is, 9 clays before he received Lorette's position. W. A. White, V. R. Shalander, L. E. Norris, F. M. Bishop, and H. T. Trombley each had less seniority than Lorette. Each of these five employees occupied positions similar to that of Lorette prior to the commencement of the shut-down. White joined Local No. 2532 during the shut-down and he was reinstated to his own posi- 50 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD tion on April 11. Shalander joined Local No. 2532 during' the shut-- down and he was reinstated to the position of spot No. 2 trimmer on April 18. Norris joined Local No. 2532 on April 18 and was reinstated to his own position on April 25. Bishop was a member of Local No. 2532 prior to the commencement of the shut-down. He- was reinstated to his own position on April 11. Trombley joined. Local No. 2532 during the shut-down and he was reinstated to the position of trimmer No. 2 on April 18. In addition there were other employees with less seniority than Lorette who were reinstated before May 23 and after they affiliated with Local No. 2532. Mike Kovach. Kovach was hired by the respondent between Feb- ruary 13 and April 8, 1927. On March 18 Kovach was a lumber handler classified as a shed worker in Foreman Gallagher's depart- ment. Kovach was laid off on March 18 and he was reinstated to his former position on May 31.52. Kovach was a member of Local No. 3 and he refused to join Local No. 2532, although requested to do so by Foreman Gallagher. From Kenneth McIntosh's testimony it appears that shed workers and truck loaders are interchangeable. Kovach had greater sen- iority than J. Anderson, a truck loader who was reinstated to that position on April 8. Anderson signed a card applying for member- ship in Local No. 2532 on April 7 and he accepted the obligations of membership in that organization on the day of his reinstatement. Kovach also had greater seniority than J. Houseman.63 Houseman, a truck loader, was reinstated to that position on May 12. House- man signed a card applying for membership in Local No. 2532 on April 6 and he accepted the obligations of membership in that organ- ization on the day before his reinstatement. Gordon Evjen. Evjen was hired by the respondent on May 17, 1937. On March 18 Evjen was a laborer in the planing-mill depart- ment. He was laid off on March 18.. On June 7 he was reinstated to the position of bull planerman. Evjen was a member of Local No. 3, and he refused to become a member of Local No. 2532, although requested to do so by Foreman Gallagher. Evjen had greater seniority than other employees who were rein- stated to various positions before June 7, 1938, and subsequent to their affiliation with Local No. 2532. Otis Hilkey. Hilkey was hired by the respondent on February,13, 1933. On March 18 he, was a rail tallyman and he received 75 cents an hour. Hilkey was laid off a. few days after the plant shut down on March 18. .Hilkey was reinstated to the position of tallyman on ^ Kovach worked for 1 day, April 9, 1938 , shortly after his department reopened. co Houseman was one of the charging employees who did not testify in these cases. WEST -OREGON! LUMBER COMPANY 51 June 28, 1938, 2 days before the close of the first hearing in these cases and after Hilkey and Foreman Gallagher testified with respect to the allegations of discrimination against him. Hilkey was a member of Local No. 3. He also served for a- time as a member of its plant committee. Gallagher testified that he did not reinstate Hilkey upon the re- opening of, the plant because, although Hilkey was a very good "all- around" tallyman, Jack Knutsen was a little faster than he. The respondent did not produce any records or similar evidence to sup- port Gallagher's testimony in this respect.54 As we point out in discussing the allegations of discrimination against Maurice Bertram, Knutsen joined Local No. 2532 only a few days prior to his reinstate- ment. Hilkey also had greater seniority than Knutsen. Hilkey had also handled lumber for the respondent. J. Houseman was doing this kind of work for the respondent on March 18 and he 'was reinstated to this same position on May 12,1938., Houseman had less seniority than Hilkey. Houseman signed a card applying for membership in Local No. 2532 during the shut-down and he accepted the obligations of membership in that organization the day before he was reinstated.55 Joe Anderson, an employee who handled lumber for the respondent on March 18, was reinstated to the same, position on April 8, 1938. Anderson; had less seniority than Hilkey. Ander- son signed a card applying for membership in Local No. 2532 on the day before his reinstatement, and he accepted the obligations of membership in that organization on the day of his reinstatement. Earl Johnson. Johnson was hired by the respondent on February 25, 1936. On March 18 Johnson was a dry-lumber sorter and he received 621/2 cents an hour. He was laid off on March 18 and he had not been reinstated by June 13, 1938, the day he testified. From Kenneth McIntosh's testimony it appears that he was subsequently reinstated. Johnson was a member of Local No. 3. Johnson had applied to Foreman Bennett and Superintendent Wilkinson for reinstatement on a number of occasions but without success. About a month be- fore he testified in these cases he had substantially the following conversation with Bennett: Q. What further discussion was there? A. Well, .I [Johnson] just said to him, I said, "What have I got to do to get a job here, get one of those great big white buttons [A. F. of L. insignia] ?" 54 The records which Gallagher produced purported to show only that his crew was more efficient after the plant reopened than it was before the shut-down commencing March 18. 11 Houseman was one of the charging employees in these cases who did not testify. 52 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Q. What did he reply? A. He [Bennett] said, "I wouldn't tell you that, but you can see who is working and draw your own conclusions." Johnson, however, did not join Local No. 2532. Johnson had greater seniority than several employees who on or about April 18 and thereafter were given positions involving the handling of green lumber. Some of these employees had become members of Local No. 2532 prior to their reinstatement. (g) Refusal to reinstate 29 employees Joseph Gerritsen. Gerritsen was first hired by the respondent in 1935. He left in the fall of 1936 and was reemployed in December 1937. Foreman Dennis McKay praised Gerritsen'A work. On March 18 Gerritsen was employed on a machine known as the timber cut- off and he received 65 cents an hour. He was laid off on March 18 and he has not been reinstated. Gerritsen was a member of Local No. 3. He refused to affiliate with Local No. 2532. On April 11 Foreman McKay told him that his machine would not be placed in operation and that he might be reinstated within a day or two. Gerritsen, however, observed the respondent place the timber cut-off in operation on April 11. Ac- cordingly he applied for reinstatement to Superintendent Wilkin- son. Wilkinson replied that he would consider the matter later. Gerritsen applied several times thereafter but without success. On April Ti Gerritsen's position was filled by J. C. Roth. Prior to the shut-down commencing March 18, J. C. Roth had been a member of Local No. 3. The record shows, however, that Roth joined Local No. 2532 on April 1, 1938. Gerritsen started to work for the respondent before Roth did and his last period of uninter- rupted service was longer than that of Roth. Max Dilley. Dilley was hired by the respondent in October 1923. He left the respondent's employment in 1926 and returned thereto on April 21, 1927. On March 18 Dilley was employed as a mill- crane operator and he received 671/2 cents an hour. He was laid off on March 18. He has not been reinstated. Dilley was a member of Local No. 3 and he refused to become a member of Local No. 2532. Shortly before April 11 Foreman Harry Duncan remarked to Dilley that the superintendent was won- dering why Dilley had not as yet "signed up," referring to joining Local No. 2532. Dilley replied that he had "signed up" in the fall of 1937, referring to his affiliation with Local No. 3. On April 11 Dilley applied for reinstatement. Foreman McKay informed Dilley that the crane of which Dilley had been the operator would A VEST OREGON LIIII•SEP^\ C^RMPAITY 53 not be started ' for a couple of days. - On April 12' this crane was placed in operation and Dilley's position filled by Clarence Wilson. Dilley applied several times thereafter but without success. Prior to the shut-down Wilson had operated a crane during the night shift. He had been "broken in" as a crane operator by Dilley in April 1937 , and he had less seniority than Dilley. Wilson had been a member of Local No. 3 -. ' On February 7, 1938, lie signed a card applying for membership in Local No . 2532. In March 1938 he signed a pledge of loyalty to Local No . 3. ' On April 4, 1938, he became a member of Local No. 2532 . In short, Dilley, a member of Local No . 3, was replaced by Wilson who shifted from Local No. 3 to Local No. 2532 shortly before April 12, although Dilley had greater seniority. F. B. Robertson . Robertson was first hired by the respondent in 1917. He left the respondent 's employment in 1929. During a por- tion of this period from 1917 to 1929 Robertson acted as foreman of the respondent 's green chain and occasionally during the World War he substituted for the superintendent . He returned to the respondent 's employment in 1929, left in 1930 and returned again on June 6, 1936 . On March 18, 1938, Robertson was employed as a gang sawyer, and he received 80 cents an hour. He was laid off on March 18. He has not been reinstated. Robertson was a member of Local No. 3 and during the shut -clown he refused to join Local No. 2532, although requested to do so by Foremen McKay and Brower. Prior to the shut -down commencing March 18 the respondent op- erated two gang saws, designated No. 1 and No . 2 respectively , during the day shift and one gang saw during the night shift. Robertson operated gang saw No. 1 and R. E. Utz operated gang saw No. 2 during the day shift , and A . O. White operated the gang saw at night. On April 11 the respondent restarted gang saw No. 2 and filled this position by reinstating A. O. White. On April 18 the respondent began to operate gang saw No. 1 with Utz in charge. On May 26 the respondent began to operate the gang saw at night with White as the sawyer . Respondent Exhibit No. 18 does not reveal which person , if any , undertook the operation of gang saw No. 2 during the day shift when White was transferred to the night shift. White started to work for the respondent on August 3, 1.936. Utz began to work for the respondent on April 13 , 1936. He left the respondent 's employment , - however, in July 1937 and dici not return until several weeks thereafter . Thus Robertson had greater prior experience with the respondent than both White and Utz. Robert- son's last period of uninterrupted service with the respondent was also greater than that of eitlier White or Utz. °_°SS03]-^1- rol. 20----s 54 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Both White and Utz were members of Local No. 2532 at the time of their reinstatement. L. C. Goodwin. Goodwin was hired by the respondent in Feb- ruary 1936. His work was criticized once by Superintendent Wil- kinson about the beginning of March 1938. His foreman, Brower, however, had praised his work. On March 18 Goodwin was em- ployed on a machine known as the resaw hoist and received 65 cents an hour. Goodwin was laid off when the plant shut down on March 18. He has not been reinstated. Goodwin was a member of Local No. 3, and he refused to become a member of Local No. 2532, although requested to do so during the shut-down by Foreman McKay. On April 11 he applied for rein- statement but was told by McKay that his position would be filled by an employee identified as "Frenchy," an employee who had greater seniority than Goodwin. On April 11, however, the position was in fact not given to "Frenchy" but to G. K. Ziemer, an employee who operated the resaw hoist during the night shift prior to the shut- down. Ziemer was first hired by the respondent on September 29, 1936. He thus had less seniority than Goodwin. Ziemer had been a mem- ber of Local No. 3 but he accepted the obligations of membership in Local No. 2532 on April 5, 1938, a few days before his reinstatement to Goodwin's position. E. F. Bennett. Bennett was hired by the respondent on June 21, 1937. On March 18 he operated a machine known as the No. 1 trimmer spotter during the night shift. Bennett was laid off when the plant shut down on March 18 and he has not been reinstated. Bennett was a member of Local No. 3. The. position which Bennett filled prior to the commencement of the shut-down was given to R. O. Burk on. May 31. Burk had greater seniority than Bennett. Burk was reinstated on April 27, shortly after joining Local No. 2532. F. M. Bishop and H. T. Trombley each had less seniority than Bennett. F. M. Bishop was a member of Local No. 2532 prior to the commencement of the shut-down and he was reinstated on April 11 to a position similar to that held by Bennett. Trombley joined Local No. 2532 during the shut-down, and he was reinstated on April 18 to a position similar to that held by Bennett. W. Zimmerman had less seniority than Bennett, and the position which he held on March 18 was discontinued by the respondent. He joined Local No. 2532 during the shut-down and on April 11 he was reinstated to a newly created position, that of labor millwright. L. A. Reinikka had less seniority than Bennett. Reinikka was a member of Local No. 2532 prior to the commencement of the shut- - WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 55 down. On April 18 he was given a newly created position of unloader. J. K. Bishop left the respondent's employment on February 25, 1938. The respondent rehired him as a trimmer spotter on June 6, 1938. J. K. Bishop had signed a card applying for membership in Local No. 2532 on February 7, 1938, and he accepted the obligations of membership therein on June 21. Frank Russell. Russell was hired by the respondent in 1930. On March 18 he filled the position known as spot No. 3 trimmer, and he received 65 cents an hour. Russell was laid off when the plant shut down on March 18. He has not been reinstated. .Russell was a member of Local No. 3, and he refused to become a member of Local No. 2532 although requested to do so. The position which Russell held prior to the commencement of the shut-down was discontinued by the respondent and the work which Russell per-_ formed was done in another department after the plant reopened. Several persons with less seniority than Russell were reinstated upon and after the reopening of the plant to positions similar to the one filled by Russell prior to the commencement of the shut-down. We have already set forth the records of a number of employees holding similar positions in connection with our discussion of the allegations with respect to Lorette and Bennett. These facts are also relevant to the allegations with respect to Russell. Joe Bertucci. Bertucci was hired by the respondent on September 5, 1933. On March 18 Bertucci was employed as a trimmer and received 671/2 cents an hour. Bertucci worked on several different operations in the planing department, the department in which he worked when the plant shut down on March 18. He was laid off when the plant closed and he has not been reinstated. Bertucci was a member of Local No. 3. He attended the talk which Kenneth McIntosh delivered to the planing-mill department em- ployees on or about April 18. Bertucci understood Kenneth McIntosh to mean that the planing-mill employees would have to join Local No. 2532 if they wished their department to reopen. Ac- cordingly, following Kenneth McIntosh's speech, Bertucci signed a card applying for membership in Local No. 2532. After he signed the card, however, he reconsidered the matter and decided to retain his membership in Local No. 3. Consequently he never appeared at the Labor Temple to accept the obligations of membership in Local No. 2532. When the planing mill reopened on or about April 25 Bertucci was not reinstated. The planing-mill department had five trimmer posi- tions prior to the commencement of the shut-down. Of the five persons who held these positions Bertucci was fourth in seniority and 56 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Frank Pro fifth in seniority. Upon the reopening of the department only three trimmer positions were filled and these were given to the three trimmers of greatest seniority. Pro, the trimmer who had less seniority than Bertucci, was reinstated on May 23 to a position called chipper feeder. A number of persons with less seniority than Bertucci were reinstated upon or after the reopening of the plant to positions similar to that held by Bertucci prior to the commencement of the shut-down. We have already set forth the employment records of several such persons in our discussion of the allegations with respect to Lorette and Bennett. G. L. Smith. Smith was hired by the respondent on or about October 16, 1936. On March 18 Smith was an assistant engineer and received 671/2 cents an hour. Smith was laid off when the plant shut down on March 18. He has not been reinstated. Smith was a member of Local No. 3. During the shut-down Fore- man Lansberry told Smith that if he wished to work lie would have to join Local No. 2532. Smith, however, retained his membership in Local No. 3. Prior to the shut-down commencing March 18 the respondent em- ployed three assistant engineers. Smith had greater seniority than one of the assistant engineers and less seniority than the other. On April 11 the respondent employed two assistant engineers and rein- stated to those positions A. F. Aldridge. the assistant engineer who had greater seniority than Smith, and H. E. Cusic, the assistant engineer who had less seniority than Smith. Both Aldridge and Cusic had become members of Local No. 25:32, prior to the commence- ment of the slut-down. Louis Chapo. Chapo was hired by the respondent in August 1933. Prior to the shut-down he was employed as a fireman and received 671/ cents an hour. He was laid off a few days after the shut-down commenced on March 18 and he has not been reinstated. Chapo was a member of Local No. 3. He refused to join Local No. 2532 although requested to do so. On March 18 the respondent employed six firemen. Of these six firemen Chapo had the second greatest seniority. By April 12 the respondent had reinstated to the position of fireman the five persons who held that position prior to the commencement of the shut-down. Thus the only fireman not reinstated was Chapo, although he had greater seniority than four of the firemen reinstated. Four of the firemen reinstated had become members of Local No. 2532 prior to their reinstatemelit. The fifth fireman, reinstated, A. J. Newman, signed a card applying for membership in Local No. 2532 on April 8, 1938, he accepted the obligations of membership in that organization on April 9, 1938, and he was reinstated on April 8; 1938. WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 57 Howard Mangum. Mangum was hired by the respondent in Feb- ruary 1936. On March 18 he was employed as a fireman 's helper. Mangum was laid off a few days after the shut-down started on March 18 and he has not been reinstated. Mangum was a member of Local No. 3. He refused to become a member of Local No. 2532 although requested to do so. On March 18 the respondent employed four firemen helpers. The respondent employed one fireman helper on April 11 and added an additional fireman helper to its force on each of the following dates-April 12, May 15, May 28. F. G. Brewer, a fireman helper prior to the commencement of the shut-down, was reinstated to the position of fireman helper on April 11, 1938. He had less seniority than Mangum and he was a member of Local No. 2532 at the time of his reinstatement . From May 15 to May 25 Cusic acted as a fireman 's helper. We have already pointed out that Cusic became a member of Local No. 2532 prior to his reinstatement . Cusic had less seniority than Mangum. Randall Perkins. Perkins was hired by the respondent on August 5, 1935. On March 18 he was employed as a millwright operator and lie received 871/2 cents an hour. Perkins was laid off when the plant shut down on March 18. He has not been reinstated. Perkins was a member of Local No. 3 and he refused to become a. member of Local No. 2532, although requested to do so during the shut-down by Foreman Lansberry. On April 9 L. H. Hinmers , formerly an oiler, was reinstated to the position of millwright helper . Hinmers had less seniority than Perkins. Hinmers became a member of Local No. 2532 prior to the shut-down . On April 11, 1938, C. J. Hansen , formerly a mill- wright helper, was reinstated to the newly created position of mill- wright. Hansen had less seniority than Perkins , and lie became a member of Local No. 2532 2 days prior to his reinstatement. On April 11 W. Zimmerman , formerly a slasher, was reinstated to the position of labor millwright. Zimmerman had less seniority. than Perkins and he became a member of Local No. 2532 shortly before his reinstatement . On April 25 O. M. Moore, formerly a millwright operator , was reinstated to that position . Moore had less seniority than Perkins and he joined Local No. 2532 prior to such rein- statement. Frank Lindahl. Lindahl was first hired by the respondent in 1923. His last period of uninterrupted service dates from August 1935. On March 18 he occupied the position of operator millwright, and he received 871/9 cents an hour . Lindahl was laid off when the plant shut down on March 18. He has not been reinstated. Lindahl was a member of Local No . 3. Lindahl 's seniority is the same as that of Perkins. Accordingly , the comparisons which we 58 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR- RELATIONS BOARD have set forth in our discussion of the allegations with respect to Perkins are equally relevant in connection with Lindahl' s case. Henry Snider. Snider was hired by the respondent in 1918 or 1919. On March 18 Snider was classified as a sander. From the record it appears, however, that the sanding machine had not been in frequent operation for a year or two prior to March 18. Snider performed miscellaneous tasks, including oiling, tending conveyers, and cleaning. He received 621/2 cents an hour. Snider was laid off when the plant shut down on March 18, and he has not been rein- stated. Snider was a member of Local No. 3. He refused to join Local No. 2532, although requested to do so by Foreman Anderson. Upon the reopening of the plant Snider applied to Anderson for reinstate- ment. Anderson replied, "You know what the trouble is." Snider had greater seniority than other employees reinstated to various positions on and after April 7 and subsequent to their affiliation with Local No. 2532. John Desimini. Desimini was first hired by the respondent in 1920. He left the respondent's employment in 1924 and returned to work for the respondent in 1925. On March 18 Desimini occupied the position of grader No. 2 in the planing-mill department, and he received 721/2 cents an hour. Desimini was laid off on March 18. When.the plant reopened Desimini's position was discontinued by the respondent. Apparently Desimini has not been reinstated to any other position. Desimini was a member of Local No. 3. On or about April 28 Foreman Anderson told Desimini that-if he wished to work he. should see one "Red" 56 and "think it over." Desimini understood from what Anderson said that Anderson wished him to join Local No. 2532. L. C. Versteeg had less seniority than Desimini. Versteeg joined Local No. 2532 during the shut-down and on April 9 he was rein- stated to grading work. Boy Colglazier. Colglazier was hired by the respondent in 1927 or 1928. On March 18 Colglazier was a bull planerman in the plan- ing-mill department and he received 721/2 cents an hour. Colglazier was laid off when the plant shut down on March 18 and he has not been reinstated. Colglazier was a member of Local No. 2532. On different occasions Colglazier was asked to join Local No. 2532 by. Foremen Duncan, Gallagher, and McKay. On April 11 Oolglazier applied to Super- intendent Wilkinson for reinstatement. Wilkinson informed Col- 36 From other parts of the record it appears that "Red" is Aldridge, an active solicitor on behalf of Local No. 2532. WEST OREGO 'N LUMBER COMPANY 59 glazier that he would be reinstated if he joined Local No. 2532. Colglazier, however, refused to become a member of that organization. On April 25, 1938, the position of bull planerman was given to L. C. Hutchison, who prior to the shut-down had been Colglazier's helper. Hutchison had less seniority than Colglazier and he became a member of Local No. 2532 prior to his reinstatement to Colglazier's former position. Richard Symons. Symons was hired by the respondent on March 19, 1936. On March 18 Symons was a boom helper during the night shift and he received 65 cents an hour. Symons was laid off when the plant shut down on March 18. He has not been reinstated. Symons was a member of Local No. 3, and he refused to become a member of Local No. 2532, although requested to do so. About the time the plant reopened Foreman McKay told Symons that if Symons wished to return to work he had to join Local No. 2532. C. D. MacMahon, also a boom helper during the night shift prior to the commencement of the shut-down, had less seniority than Symons. MacMahon signed a card applying for membership in Local No. 2532 67 during the shut-down and he was reinstated on April 11 to the position of boom helper during the day shift. On May 23 MacMahon was made boom foreman during the night shift. H. W. Judd. Judd was hired by the respondent in June 1934. On March 18 he held the position of edgerman during the night shift and he received 921/2 cents an hour. Judd was laid off when the plant shut down on March 18, and he has not been reinstated. Judd was a member of Local No. 3. Judd applied for reinstate- ment on a number of occasions on and after April 11 but without success. On the Saturday prior to the reopening of the night shift, Judd applied to Superintendent Wilkinson for reinstatement. Wil- kinson, however, would not commit himself. On the day the night shift reopened Judd again asked Wilkinson for a position. Wilkin- son replied that another woilldbe 'reinstated in Judd's place. Judd asked for the reason. and Wilkinson referred him to Kenneth Mc- Intosh. McIntosh referred him back to Wilkinson. In the course of this interview Wilkinson passed by them. Thereupon Judd again asked Wilkinson "What is what?" Before Wilkinson could reply, McIntosh stated, in substance, "I am not passing the buck here, we just haven't any job; that is all." The position of edgerman which Judd formerly held was given on May 23 to J. Parypa, who prior to the commencement of the shut- down occupied the position of setter during the night shift and who also at times substituted for Judd. Parypa had less seniority than Judd and he became a member of Local No. 2532 during the shut- 67 MacMahon accepted the obligations of membership in Local No. 2532 on April 19. 60 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD down. The appointment which Parypa received on May 23 was a transfer from the position of deck scaler during the day shift to which Parypa had been reinstated on April 11 . This position of deck scaler had been filled prior to the commencement of the shut- down by M. Eaton. On May 23 Eaton was reinstated to the position of deck scaler during the night shift. Eaton , who was a member of Local No. 2532 at the time of the shut-down, had less seniority than Judd. The position of deck scaler during the day shift was given on May 23 to E. A. Brown, who prior to the commencement of the shut-down occupied the position of cleaner . Brown , who was a member of Local No. 2532 at the time of the shut-down, had less seniority than Judd. William Violette. Violette was hired by the respondent on Feb- ruary 10, 1937 . On March 18 he occupied the position , of filer during the night shift and he received 821/. cents an hour. Violette was laid off on March 18. He has not been reinstated. Violette was a member of Local No. 3 and he refused to become it member of Local No. 2532 although requested to do so during the shut-down. Prior to the commencement of the shut-down the respondent em- ployed during the day shift a head filer , an assistant filer, and a filer helper. On the night shift the respondent employed a filer. With respect to.these day-shift positions, A. E. McIntosh testified that the head filer quit, that filers are highly skilled, and there were no spare filers available at the respondent 's plant, and that accord- ingly the respondent hired a person from the outside to fill the position of head filer. A . E. and Kenneth McIntosh testified further that by custom the head filer was privileged to appoint his own assistant . From the record it does not appear whether the respond- ent ever considered Violette for the position of head filer and if it did whether the respondent purportedly determined that Violette was not sufficiently skilled for that position. The new head filer, P. T. Hobbs, began to work .for the respondent on April 7, 1938, and he brought with him his son who began to work for the respondent as filer helper on April 11 . P. T. Hobbs, Jr., joined Local No. 2532 a few days after his employment by the respondent and P . T. Hobbs, Sr., joined Local No. 2532 on May 20. The position of assistant filer during the day shift was given on April 11 to S. L. Cormany, who prior to the commencement of the shut-down was the filer helper. From A. E. McIntosh 's testimony it is not clear whether the head filer was given the privilege of appointing one or more assistants . Kenneth McIntosh , however, testified that the new head filer "is always given the privilege of selecting a new assistant ." Accordingly , we conclude that P. T. Hobbs, Sr., was given the privilege of appointing one and under the WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 61 circumstances we think it clear that that one was his son who first came to work for the respondent when he, P. T. Hobbs, Sr., was appointed. Cormany, who had become a member of Local No. 2532 prior to the shut-down, had less seniority than Violette. On May 23 the position of night filer was given to J. W. Cowling, a new employee. Frank W. Leasia. Leasia was hired by the respondent in 1924. On March 18 he was employed in the position of cleaner during the night shift, and he received 621/ cents an hour. Leasia has held several other positions with the respondent. He was laid off on March 18 and he has not been reinstated. Leasia was a member of Local No. 3. His position was given, on May 23, to W. Hofman,55 who prior to the commencement of the shut-down held a similar position during the day shift. Hoffman had less seniority than Leasia, and he joined Local No. 2532 after the plant reopened and prior to his reinstatement. R. L. Sinis 59 held a similar position during the night shift prior to the commencement of the shut-down, and he was reinstated to. his former position on May 23. Sims had less seniority than Leasia, and he joined Local No. 2532 after. the plant reopened and before his reinstatement. Frank C. Lucker. Lucker was hired by the respondent on July 19, 1936. On March 18 he was a chipper picker during the night shift and he received 621/2 cents an hour. He was laid off on March 18 and he has not been reinstated. Lucker was a member of Local No. 3. On May 23 L. C. Kocarnik was given the position of chipper picker during the night shift. Prior to the commencement of the shut-down Kocarnik had occupied a position which the respondent discontinued. .Kocarnik had less seniority than Lucker and he became a member of Local No. 2532 after the plant reopened and prior to his rein- statement. Daryl Calloway. Calloway was hired by the respondent in April 1937. On March 18 he was a laborer during the day shift and he received 621/ cents an hour. From Calloway's testimony it appears that he sorted lumber in the planing-mill department. Calloway was laid off on March 18 and he has not been reinstated. Calloway was a member of Local No. 3. Persons with less seniority than Calloway were reinstated to various positions upon * and after the reopening of the plant and subsequent to their affiliation with Local No. 2532. 65 Hoffman was one of the charging employees who did not testify in these cases. 5» Sims was one of the charging employees who did not testify in these cases. 62 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Gustaf Ljungland. Ljungland was hired by the respondent on May 14, 1928, and has worked for the respondent since that time except for periods during which he was ill. On March 18 he operated the dock stencil. He was laid off when the plant shut down on March 18 and he has not been reinstated. Ljungland was a member of Local No. 3. Foreman Pederson told Ljungland that he was dependable and that he "stenciled the load right." On April 15 Ljungland's position was given to T. A. McCoy. McCoy began work for the respondent on May 25, 1937, and on March 18 McCoy was a fuel picker, this job being discontinued by the respondent. McCoy did not sign a card pledging loyalty to the I. W. A. when such cards were circulated by Local No. 3 in March 1938. Although Petitioner Exhibit No. 3-C does not list McCoy as a member of Local No. 2532, it appears from Ljungland's testimony that McCoy wore an A. F. of L. button.80 On May 23 McCoy became ill and the dock-stencil position was given to P. Bennett. P. Bennett began work for the respondent on December 16, 1936. On March 18 he was employed in the position of a pull trimmer, this job being discontinued by the respondent. Bennett became a member of Local No. 2532 prior to his reinstatement on May 23. Kenneth McIntosh testified that dock stenciling "is comparatively light work around the plant and can be done by men who are physi- cally or otherwise unable to handle the heavier work; so that job is used in that way round our plant." McIntosh testified further that he did know why Ljungland was replaced by McCoy and Bennett. C. E. Nordyke. Nordyke was hired by the respondent in Septem- ber 1936. On March 18 Nordyke was a carrier driver and he received 721/2 cents an hour. Nordyke was laid off on March 18. He has not been reinstated. Nordyke was a member of Local No. 3 and for a time he served as a member of its plant committee. Toward the end of February 1938, the respondent refused to permit Nordyke to serve on a union committee which the respondent was sending to San Francisco to probe the extent of the Carpenters' boycott against the respondent in that area. On April 18 when Kenneth McIntosh delivered his talk to the planing-mill employees, Nordyke asked questions which were calculated to reveal that the true purpose of McIntosh's talk was to coerce the employees into affiliation with Local No. 2532. Prior to the commencement of the shut-down the respondent em- ployed six carrier drivers. Upon and after the reopening of the plant the respondent employed seven carrier drivers, five of them 61 Ljungland referred to McCarthy . From the record, however, it is clear that he was referring to the person who filled his position after the reopening of the plant and this person 's name is given on Respondent Exhibit No . 18 as T. A . McCoy. \W'F.ST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 63 having held this position on March 18 . Of the other two, one was transferred from the position of garage mechanic and the other, M. Skeels , was a person formerly employed by the respondent but not on the respondent 's pay roll on March 18. It does not appear from the record that any of these seven had become affiliated with Local No. 2532 by the time of his reinstatement. A. H. Anderson, the tractor driver, employed by the respondent on March 18, was reinstated to that position on April 7, 1938. Ander- son had less seniority than Nordyke and he became a member of Local No. 2532 on April 1, 1938, that is, less than a week prior to such reinstatement. The respondent also employed a number of truck drivers. Prior to the summer of 1937 the truck drivers had been members of the.Team- sters' Union, an A . F. of L . affiliate. At that- time they abandoned the Teamsters ' Union to affiliate with Local No. 3 . In the spring of 1938, however, the truck drivers shifted their allegiance back to the Teamsters ' Union. The Teamsters ' Union had been cooperating with Local No. 2532 in its campaign to regain the respondent's em- ployees. The persons employed as truck drivers by the respondent upon and after the reopening of the plant all had less seniority than Nordyke. Two of them, Al Diller and T . J. Kelley, had left the re- spondent's employment in September 1937 because they did not wish to become members of Local No. . 3. In May 1938 when the respondent needed two additional truck drivers, the respondent employed Diller and Kelley at the request of William Wedel , connected with Local No. 2532. Maurice Bertram . Bertram was hired by the respondent on June 18, 1929. On March 18 he was classified as a retail tallyman and he received 75 cents an hour. Bertram was laid off a few days after the plant shut down on March 18 and he has not been reinstated. Bertram was a member of Local No . 3. He has also served as a member. of its plant committee. In December 1937 Bertram had participated in discussions concerning the respondent 's offer to Local No. 3 of a collective bargaining contract. Bertram was a member of the committee representing Local No. 3 which conferred with the Mclntoshes upon the reopening of the plant with respect to charges that the respondent was discriminating against members of Local No. 3. Although Respondent Exhibit No. 18 classified Bertram as a retail tallyman, it appears from Kenneth McIntosh 's testimony that retail-tallying work was "practically ' entirely discontinued" toward the beginning of 1937, and from Bertram's testimony it is clear that Bertram did rail -tally work as well as other types of tally work prior to the shut-down . J. Knutsen , who was employed as a rail tally- man prior to the shut -down , was reinstated to that position on April 64 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD 7, 1938. Knutsen had less seniority than Bertram. He had less experience than,Bertram with the respondent as a tallyman and he became a member of Local No. 2532 less than a week before his re- instatement. Foreman Gallagher testified that he selected Knutsen in preference to Bertram because Knutsen was the respondent's best "all-around" tallyman. The respondent has produced no records or similar evidence showing that the respondent did consider Knut- sen more efficient than Bertram."l Moreover, Bertram worked for the respondent without interruption for 9 years and did tally work during 51/9 of those 9 years, whereas Knutsen did not start to work for the respondent until August 1934. Furthermore, prior to the shut-down Gallagher praised Bertram's work. Gallagher testified that he had no reason other than that of Bertram's relative ability for not reinstating him. The respond- ent's attorney, however, stated on the record that one of the reasons why the respondent did not reinstate Bertram after the plant re- opened on April 7 was because Bertram caused a temporary stoppage of work in 1936. In 1936 the respondent's employees were affiliated with Local No. 2532 and at that time its plant committee, of which Bertram was cha.irtnan, caused a temporary stoppage of work in order to procure the discharge of a fellow employee. The plant committee was carrying out the instructions of the executive board ,of Local No. 2532 and its membership. As the record stands it would appear that the 1936 stoppage was an instance of union activity protected by the Act, and if we believed the statement of the respondent's attorney we would be compelled to hold that by refusing to reinstate Bertram in 1938 for his lawful union activity in 1936 the respondent was thereby engaging in an unfair labor prac- tice within Section 8 (3). We are of the opinion, however, that Bertram's activity in 1936 did not motivate the respondent. in its refusal to reinstate him 2 years later, because Bertram continued to work for the respondent without molestation long after the stop- page of 1936. But the respondent's resurrection of a long-closed incident to justify its refusal to reinstate Bertram casts doubt on the bona fides of its defense. Tallying is a form of grading work. L. C. Versteeg and E. Lan- deem, both with less seniority than Bertram, were reinstated to grading positions after they became members of Local No. 2532. In addition to tallying, Bertram had performed many other tasks for the respondent during the course of his employment. Bertram had greater seniority than other employees who were reinstated to various positions upon and after the reopening of the plant. 81 Footnote 54, supra.. WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 65 William F. Carley. Cawley was hired by the respondent on Janu- ary 19, 1927. On March 18 he was a lumber handler. He was clas- sified as a. truck loader and as a carrier driver in Foreman Gallagher's department and he received 721/2 cents an hour. Carley was laid off on March 20, 2 days after the plant shut down and he has not been reinstated. Carley was a member of Local No. 3. On one occasion Foreman Gallagher asked Carley, in substance, whether he "was ready to come over on their side." Carley, however, refused to join Local No. 2532. Carley's work had been praised by Foreman Duncan. Carley had seniority over J. Anderson and J. Houseman, truck loaders, both of whose records have already been set forth in our dis- cussion of the allegations of discrimination against Mike Kovach, Carley also had seniority over A. H. Anderson, tractor driver, whose record we have -set forth in discussing the allegations of. discrimina- tion against C. F. Nordyke. Richard Wail,. Wall was first hired by the respondent on March 29, 1.926. He left in 1929 and was reemployed on February 5, 1930. .On March 18 he was a truck loader. Wall was laid off on March 21, 3 days after the plant shut down and lie has not been reinstated. I all was a• member of Local No. 3. At the time of the reopening of the plant lie was serving as secretary-treasurer of its plant com- mittee and in that capacity he conferred with the McIntoshes with respect to charges that the respondent was. discriminating against members of Local No. 3. Wall applied to Gallagher for reinstate- ment. Gallagher replied in the negative and told him to see the man- agement and the plant committee of Local No. 3. Wall observed that Gallagher's reply was "rather excited." Gallagher testified that he did not reinstate Wall because Wall had been wasting too much time during working hours for a period of 6 mouths prior to March 18: Gallagher asserted further that he brought this matter to the attention of Wall. Gallagher, however, did not remember the dates or contents of these alleged conversations with Wall. Wall denied on the witness stand that Gallagher criti- cized his work. While Gallagher claimed that he observed that Wall handled fewer bundles than a fellow employee, he did not give any approximation of the difference in bundles handled by Wall and his fellow employee, nor does the record show how Wall's performance compared with the performances of other truck loaders. Gallagher also testified in this connection that Wall frequently left the place where he was working to talk to other employees. Although Gal- laglier claims that Wall's work was unsatisfactory during the 6 months prior to March 18. Gallagher did not report his complaint to 66 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD Superintendent Wilkinson or to the McIntoshes, and it does not ap- pear that he took any other disciplinary action. Gallagher also testified that he did not reinstate Wall because dur- ing 2 or 3 months prior to March 18 Wall had absented himself from work too frequently and without notice. Gallagher estimated that during the 6 months' period prior to March 18 Wall. had failed to- report for work about six or seven times. From Gallagher's testi- mony it appears that when Gallagher asked Wall about his absences Wall stated that Gallagher would not object if he knew the circum- stances causing these absences, and it also appears that Gallagher did- not ask Wall for a further explanation. Gallagher did not complain to Superintendent Wilkinson or to the McIntoshes about Wall's ab- sences, nor did he take other disciplinary action. The absences must have been known to Gallagher's superior officers, yet they did not reprimand Wall. Under the circumstances disclosed by this record we cannot credit Gallagher's testimony that he refused to reinstate Wall because of Wall's alleged absences or because of his alleged inefficiency. Wall had greater seniority than J. Anderson and J. Houseman, truck loaders. We have already set forth their employment records in our discussion of the allegations of discrimination' against Kovach. P. E. Penman. Penman was hired by the respondent on June 26, 1937. On March 18 he was a sorter of dry lumber and he received 621/2 cents an hour. He was laid off on March 18 when the plant shut down and he has not been reinstated. Penman was a member of Local No. 3. Penman had greater seniority than at least two persons who on April 18 were given positions involving the handling of green lum- ber and who joined Local No. 2532 prior to their reinstatement.62 R. T. Maa°ion. Marion was hired by the respondent in October 1929. On March 18 Marion was employed on the kiln chain and he received 621/ cents an hour. Marion had also held several other positions with the respondent at various times. He was laid off on March 18 and he has not been reinstated. Marion was a member of Local No. 3. The kiln chain was used in the processing of dry lumber and, as we have already noted, the respondent's reorganization of the plant required discontinuing many operations involving the handling of dry lumber. The record shows, however, that many dry-lumber handlers were reinstated to other positions in the plant. Marion had greater seniority than several employees who were reinstated to various positions on and after April 11, and many of these employees obtained membership in Local No. 2532 prior to their reinstatement. ,11L. A. Reinikka and W. Zimmerman. WEST OREGON: LUMBER COMPANY 67 Leslie James. James was hired by the respondent on July 25, 1936: On March 18 James was a dock laborer and he received. 65 cents an hour. James was laid off on March 18. He has not been reinstated.83 James was a member of Local No. 3. During the shut-down Fore- man Gallagher asked him whether he had become a member of Local No. 2532 and he replied that he had not. James had greater seniority than V. Shadley , who was reinstated to a position as dock laborer on April 13 . Prior to the coimuence- ment of the shut-down Shadley had been a crane chaser and this position had been discontinued by the respondent . Shadley became a member of Local No. 2532 during the shut-down and prior to this reinstatement . On May 13 Shadley was transferred to another position. 2. Concluding findings The Mclntoshes testified that proper operation of the plant, as reorganized subsequent to the shut-down, does not require quite as many employees as were working prior to the shut-down. We have no reason to doubt the respondent's sincerity of belief in this con- nection. Accordingly we find that the respondent did not engage in discrimination by employing fewer persons after the shut-down than it employed on March 18. In so finding, however, we have by no means disposed of the allegations with respect to the 59. charging employees; singe we must consider further whether or not the re- spondent's method of selection of employees to be given work on and after April 7 involved discrimination against Local No. 3 and in favor of Local No. 2532. . We have already adverted to the respondent's desire and determi- nation to effect a change in the affiliation of its employees from Local No. 3 to Local No. 2532. The respondent's threat to shut the plant, and its invitation to the foremen, to procure the desired change ; the shut-down ; the widespread and systematic canvassing of employees by foremen on behalf of Local No. 2532 during this shut-down; and the consequent reopening of the plant will also be recalled. The successful development of the respondent's plan to aid Local No. 2532 in recovering its position among the respondent's employees logically involved discrimination. in employment, for this was the ultimate sanction by which the respondent could compel its employees to reaffiliate with the Carpenters. Indeed, although Local No. 2532 claimed that it had a majority on April 11, there is in fact no proof that it had obtained at that time an ostensible majority of the persons employed on March 18 and the record does not James worked for 1 day for the respondent , during the shut -down, that is, on March 23. 68 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD justify an inference that the respondent or Local No. 2532 thought that such majority had been procured .64 Moreover , it will be recalled that the respondent did not contem- plate operating the plant during the continuance of the boycott. As appears from the respondent 's answer a few days prior to April 11, Local No. 2532, purporting to have a majority and so advising the respondent , informed the Mclntoshes that the boycott would end if the respondent resumed operations "under conditions that met the approval" of Local No. 2532. The boycott and the shut-down terminated at about the same time . Thus the plant reopened on terms satisfactory to Local No., 2532. This, of course., meant that members of Local No. 2532 would be preferred for reinstatement and for continued employment. The conduct of A. E . and Kenneth McIntosh and Superintendent Wilkinson upon and subsequent to the reopening of the plant leaves no doubt that the respondent 's policy was to discriminate against members of Local No. 3 and in favor of members of Local No. 2532. We have already referred to A. E . McIntosh 's statement that the respondent 's reinstatement policy could not be unaffected by its determination to prevent a renewed boycott even at the risk of being ordered to pay back wages, to Kenneth McIntosh 's speech of April 18 informing the planing -mill employees that the reopening of that department hinged upon their becoming affiliated with Local No. 2532 , to Kenneth 's request that James Park resign from Local No. 3, to Kenneth 's veiled threats to William Theis that employees who did not join Local No. 2532 might never be reinstated , and to Super- intendent Wilkinson 's statement to. Roy Colglazier that he could obtain reinstatement by signing "up with the A. F. of L." Numerous statements by foremen , which we have set forth above, also support our conclusion that the respondent 's reinstatement and employment policy on and after April 7 was discriminatory. Thus Gallagher informed Carl Engbrecht and Vito Dema.rinis that they would be reinstated if they joined Local No. 2532 and they did re- ceive employment upon obtaining membership in that organization. McKay informed Richard Symons that Symons could return to work only by joining Local No. 2532 , and upon Rene Lorette's refusal to join Local No . 2532 McKay stated to him "If you don 't want to work, it's up to you." Lansberry impliedly told R. L. Bell that 6l Petitioner Exhibit No . 3-C lists the names of employees purportedly affiliated with Local No. 2532 , the dates of application for membership , and the dates of acceptance of the obligations of membership . On this exhibit substantially less than half of the persons employed on March 18 are claimed as applicants for membership in or as members of Local No. 2532 , by April 11. There is nothing in the record to indicate that persons em- ployed by the respondent on March 18, in addition to those listed on Petitioner Exhibit No. 3-C, applied for or accepted , membership in Local No . 2532 on or before April 11, 1938, in sufficient number to give to Local No. 25.12 on April 11 an ostensible majority of the persons working for the respondent on March 18. WEST OREGON, LUMBER COMPANY 69' Bell's reinstatement was contingent upon his affiliation with Local No. 2532. Anderson made statements of similar import to Henry Snider,. Jack Williams, and John Desimini; Bennett made such statements to. George Jacobs, Earl Johnson, Sam Dragovich, and N. P. Nielson;: and Duncan ]made or approved such a statement to Kokubu. Onishi told. Hokamura he was being discharged because he had reaffiliated with Local No. 3, and from Onishi's testimony it is clear that Onishi's; selections for reinstatement were based on membership in Local No. 2532. On April 11 the number of persons then identified with Local No.. 3, who were working, was disproportionately small. At the close, of the shut-down the respondent had 346 plant and production en- ployees,65 of whom about 189, or approximately 54 per cent, were identified with Local No. 3 on April 11, the date from which the. respondent reckons the resumption of operations by the clay shift.,;". Yet of the 137 persons working on April 11,67 only 29 or about 21 per cent were selected from the group then identified with Local No. 3.68 The gross disparity between a. 54-per cent expectancy and a 21-per cent realization can be explained only on the ground that the respondent's personnel on April 11 was selected discriminatorily. . "The first and third columns of Respondent Exhibit No. 18 and Petitioner Exhibit No. 6 show that 346 plant and production employees were working on March 18. the day the plant shut down. "By "identification with Local No. 3 on April 11" is meant signing a card pledging loyalty to the I. 11'. A. in March and not purporting to repudiate such pledge on or before- April 11. These pledge cards are included within Local No. 3 Exhibit No. 2. By "pur- porting to repudiate such pledge on or before April I1" is meant applying for, or obtaining, membership in Local No. 2532, or signing a letter of resignation from Local No. 3, after signing an I. W. A. pledge card and before April 12, but without regard to whether or not such purported repudiation is given effect as a valid repudiation. (Compare Section III, C (2). supra.) The persons, and dates of. making such application are shown by the second and third columns of Petitioner Exhibit No. 3-C. The persons, and dates of, obtaining such member- ship are shown by the second and fourth columns of Petitioner Exhibit No. 3-C. One such letter of resignation, and its date. is shown by Board Exhibit No. 12. The figure 189 is obtained as follows : Local No. 3 Exhibit No. 2 comprises 290 I, W. A. pledge cards, hereinafter called cards. Two cards appear to be signed by the same person. There are thus 289 signers. Comparison between the third column of Respondent Exhibit No. 1S and Petitioner Exhibit No. 6 on the one hand and the signatures to the cards on the other reveals that 272 signers were working on March 18. Inspection of the dates on these cards shows that of these 272, 270 signed the cards before April 11. Comparison of the names and dates on the cards of these 270 persons on the one hand with the names and dates of the second, third, and fourth columns of Petitioner Exhibit No. 3-C and with the name and date on Board Exhibit No. 12 on the other shows that 81 of these 270 persons had ostensibly repudiated their identification with Local No. 3 by April 11. Deducting 81 from 270 we arrive at the figure 189 representing the number of employees of the respondent, whether or not they were working on April 11, who were still identified with Local No. 3 on April 11. Fifty-four per cent is the ratio of 189 to 346. °7 The first, fourth, fifth, and eighth columns of Respondent Exhibit No. 18 and Teti-. tioner Exhibit No. 6 show that 137 named plant and production employees were reinstated or hired on or before April 11 and were working on April 11. °8 The figure 29 is obtained by comparison of the names of the 137 employees working on April 11 (footnote 67, supra ) with the names of the 189 employees identified with Local No. 3 on April 11 (footnote 66, supra ). Twenty-one per cent is the approximate ratio of 29 to 137. 2830:31-41-vol. 20 70 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD The Mclntoshes testified generally and the respondent contends,. that in selecting employees to be given work on and after April T. the respondent applied various lawful criteria including "efficiency, skill, length of service, and family obligations." The respondent, however, has not produced definite and specific evidence with respect to the scope of these purported standards, the manner in which they were applied, and the weight which the respondent attached to these categories, singly or in combination. The respondent has supplied little of the data upon which it pur- ported to act. Thus we are not given concrete information concern- ing the "family obligations" of the bulk of persons employed on March 17. Onishi testified that certain persons were inefficient but his testimony on this point was vague and general, largely con- tradicted by Koike, and besides, it is clear from Onishi's other testimony that membership in Local No. 2532 was the substantial criterion which he applied on and about April 11 in selecting persons for his crew. Gallagher also testified with respect to the efficiency of a few employees but we have already set forth the inadequacies in this testimony. For the most part, the respondent simply omitted to produce specific information or judgments with respect -to the efficiency and skill of the individuals working on March 18 and we are left with the testimony of charging employees that their work was not criticized. With respect to seniority the record shows that this criterion would have received substantial weight in a non-discriminatory selection of personnel for the respondent's plant. Kenneth McIn- tosh testified that the respondent did not have any "standard pncc- tice" in regard to three types of seniority-length of service witli the respondent (a) generally, (b) in a particular department, (c) in a particular position-and that the respondent "sometimes obeyed one and sometimes the other." The respondent has not supplied us with data showing comparative departmental seniorities. With respect to job seniority the record shows that on April 11 the number of employees. then identified with Local No. 3, who were given their own jobs back, was disproportionately small. Thus with respect to persons holding positions on March 18 which were filled by April 11, only 54 per cent of persons identified with Local No. 3 on April 11 were given their own jobs back by that date, whereas 85 per cent of persons not identified with Local No. 3 on April 11 were given their jobs back by that date.°9 We have set forth much of 0 These two ratios were calculated as follows : Of the jobs in operation on March 18, 134 were filled again by April 11 and 100 of these 134 positions were given on April 11 to persons who held them on March 18. Forty-six persons, occupying 46 of the 134 posi- tions on March 18, were identified with Local No. 3 on April 11 and 25 of these 46 persons,- or approximately 54 per cent, were given their own jobs back on April 11. Eighty-eight persons, occupying 88 of the 134 positions on March 18, were not identified with Local - WFiST DREIGON' LUMBER COMPANY 71 the information with respect to the comparative plant seniority 10 of the respondent's employees in discussing the employment history and union activity of the charging employees. It is evident from this survey that the respondent in numerous instances preferred to the charging employees persons who had less service but who had become identified with Local No. 2532.71 We conclude therefore, that the evidence concerning seniority does not bear out the respond- ent's defense but indicates, on the contrary, that the respondent was engaged in a policy of discrimination against members of Local No. 3 upon and after the reopening of the plant in April 1938. Superintendent Wilkinson was in charge of reinstatements for all departments on and after April 7. Yet he did not take the stand to explain his selections or to deny testimony that they were based on union membership. In view of the respondent's practice of notifying employees to return to work and in view of the unlawful shut-down commenc- ing March 18, it was not incumbent on the charging employees to make application for reinstatement. Under the circumstances disclosed by this record we must, and accordingly do, find that subsequent to the end of the shut-down the respondent discriminated in regard to the hire and tenure and"terms and conditions of employment of the 59 charging employees listed in Appendix "A," and Appendix "B," thereby discouraging mem- bership in Local No. 3 and encouraging membership in Local No. 2532, and that the respondent thereby interfered with, restrained, and coerced its employees in their exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act. We find that the record does not support the all of the complaint that upon and after the reopening of the plant in April 1938, the respondent discriminated against the employees named in Appendix "C" in regard to their hire and tenure and terms and conditions of employment thereby discourag- ing or encouraging membership in a labor organization. No. 3 on April 11 and 75 of these 88 persons, or approximately 85 per cent , were given their own jobs back on April 11. The method of determining the fact of identification with Local No. 3 on April 11 is explained in footnote 66, supra. From Kenneth 's testimony , from the statement of respondent 's counsel in offering Respondent Exhibit No . 18, and from other testimony in the record , it is clear that plant seniority would have been given weight in a non-discriminatory selection of personnel for the respondent's plant. It follows, therefore, that as to many positions employees may be transferred from one position to another . Inspection of Respondent Exhibit No. 18, and of the relevant testimony in the record , reveals a relatively free transferability from one position to another . In fact a number of jobs in operation upon and after the reopen- ing of the plant , including several which are treated on Respondent Exhibit No. 18 as having been created subsequent to April 7 , are not distinguishable in regard to required skills from many positions in operation on March 18 which were marked "discontinued" on Respondent Exhibit No. 18. 'a We have not attempted to point out all the instances in which members of Local No. 2532 were preferred to Local No . 3 members who had longer periods of service with the respondent. 72 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD IV. THE EFFECT OF THE UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES UPON COMMERCE The activities of the respondent set forth in Section III above, occurring in connection with the operations of the respondent de- scribed in Section I above, have a close, intimate, and substantial relation to trade, traffic, and commerce among the several States, and tend to lead and have led to labor disputes burdening and obstructing commerce and the free flow of commerce. P. THE REMEDY Having found that the respondent has engaged in unfair labor practices we will order it to cease and desist therefrom and to take certain affirmative action designed to effectuate the policies of the Act and to restore as nearly as possible the condition which existed prior to the commission of the unfair labor practices. We have found that the respondent discriminated against all the employees laid off incident to the shut-down commencing March 18. We have found further that the respondent did not engage in discrimination by employing fewer persons after the shut-down than it employed on March 18 but that upon and after the reopening of the plant the respondent 's method of selection of personnel involved discrimination in regard to the hire and tenure and terms and con- ditions of employment of the 59 charging employees named in Ap- pendix "A" and Appendix "B." Since the respondent has already reinstated the employees named in Appendix "A," we shall not order the respondent to reinstate them. The respondent , however, has not reinstated the employees named in Appendix "B." We shall therefore order the respondent to offer to the employees named in Appendix "B" reinstatement to their former or substantially equivalent positions . The offer of reinstatement shall be without prejudice to their seniority and other rights and privileges and shall be effected in the manner set forth in paragraph 2 (a) of the Order. As we have found above, a lawful shut-down would not have occurred for 5 days after March 18. Accordingly, we shall order the respondent to make payment to each of the employees named in Appendix "A" and Appendix "B" and to each of the other employees employed on March 18, 1938, an amount equal to that which he would normally have earned as wages during the 5-day period from March 18, 1938, less his net earnings '' during that period. By delay- '" By "net earnings " is meant earnings less expenses , such as for transportation, room, and,hoard , incurred by an employee in connection with obtaining work and working else- where than for the respondent . which would not have been incurred but for his unlawful discharge and the consequent necessity of bis seeking employment elsewhere. See Matter of Crossett Lauber Company and deited Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of Amer- WEST OREGON' LUMBER COMPANY 73 ing the reinstatement of, or by discharging, or by refusing to rein- state, the employees named in Appendix "A" and Appendix "B," the respondent has discriminated in regard to their hire and tenure and terms and conditions of employment. Accordingly we shall order the respondent to make payment to each of the employees named in Appendix "A" and Appendix "B," an amount equal to that which each would normally have earned as wages during the period from the date of discrimination to the date of the offer of reinstate- ment, less his net earnings 7^' during that period, had the respondent not discriminated in regard to his hire and tenure and terms and conditions of employment. Since the respondent has refused to bargain with Local No. 3 as the exclusive representative within the meaning of Section 9 (a) the policy of the Act will be best effectuated by ordering the respondent to bargain on request with Local No. 3.74 Moreover, we have found That Local No. 3 has been the exclusive representative within the meaning of Section 9 (a) at all times after October 21, 1937. The order to bargain on request with Local No. 3 is also predicated on this finding.7' Since we shall order the respondent to bargain on request with Local No. 3 as the exclusive representative, it follows that the petition of Local No. 2532 for certification must be dismissed. Since the agreement dated July 6, 1938, between the respondent and Local No. 2532 embodies recognition of Local No. 2532 as the tea, Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union, Local 2.590, 8 N. L. R. B. 440. We shall order the respondent to deduct from the back pay due under our Order moneys received by an employee for work performed upon Federal, State, county, municipal, or other work-relief projects during the period for which we are ordering the respondent to pay such employee back wages and to pay such deductions over to the proper fiscal agency of the govern- ment which supplied the funds for the work-relief project. Matter of Republic Steel Corporation and Steel Workers Organizing Committee. 9 N. L. B. It. 219, enforced in National Labor Relations Board v. Republic Steel Corp., 107 F. (2d) 472 (C. C. A. 3d). 13 Footnote 72. supra. '4National Labor Relations Board v. Louisville Refining Co., 102 F. (2d) 678 (C. C. A. (3th), cert. denied 308 U. S. 568 ; National Labor Relations Board v. Arthur L. Cotten, etc.. 105 F. (2d) 179 (C. C. A. Gth). Section 10 (c) of the Act authorizes the Board, upon finding that a person "has engaged in or is engaging in" an unfair labor practice, to order such person "to take such affirmative action * * * as will effectuate the policies of the Act." This section is designed to enable the Board to restore, as nearly as possible, the, status quo had the wrongs not been committed. The necessary delays incident to the adjudication of a dispute have postponed the Board's order until a time considerably subsequent to the original wrongful refusal to bargain. The refusal to bargain collectively disrupts the morale of the men, has a deterring effect upon the organizational activity of the union and a discouraging influence on members already gained which tends to induce them to drop from the ranks. If an order to bargain collectively cannot be deemed an appropriate remedy for the refusal to bargain collectively unless the union' s majority is kept intact until the Board can issue a decision, the plain policy and intent of the Act will be defeated. The respondent would be permitted further to evade the obligation of Section 8 (5) by profiting from the discouraging effects of its already accomplished vio- lation of that very obligation. We cannot concede the validity of such a doctrine of futility. and we hold that to effectuate the policies of the Act. the respondent' s refusal to bargain must be remedied by an order to bargain, based on the majority obtaining on the date of the refusal to bargain. "National Labor Relations Board v. National Motor Bearing Company, 105 F. (2d) 652 (C. C. A. 9th). 74 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD exclusive representative, since further the agreement represents the fruit of the respondent's unfair labor practices, a device to perpetuate their effects, and a cover under which the respondent may continue to commit unfair labor practices, we will order the respondent to cease and desist from giving effect to this or any other agreement which it may have entered into with Local No. 2532 in respect to rates of pay, wages, hours of employment, or other conditions of work and to cease and desist from recognizing Local No. 2532 as the exclusive representative of its employees unless and until it is certified as such by the Board.76 Upon the basis of the above findings of fact and upon the entire record in the case, the Board makes the following : CONCLUSIONS OF LAW 1. Lumber and Sawmill Workers Local Union No. 3 and Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union, Local No. 2532, are labor organizations within the meaning of Section 2 (5) of the Act. 2. All the plant and production employees of the respondent, in- cluding foremen, but excluding office employees and supervisory employees above the rank of foremen, constitute a unit appropriate for the purposes of collective bargaining within the meaning of Section 9 (b) of the Act. 3. Lumber and Sawmill Workers Local Union No. 3 was on October 21, 1937, and at all times thereafter has been, the exclusive representative of all such employees for the purposes of collective bargaining, within the meaning of Section 9 (a) of the Act. 4. By refusing to bargain collectively with Lumber and Sawmill Workers Local Union No. 3, as the exclusive representative of its employees in an appropriate unit, the respondent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (5) of the Act. 5. By discriminating in regard to the hire and tenure and terms and conditions of employment of all the persons employed by it on March 18, 1938, including the employees named in Appendix "A" and in Appendix "B," thereby discouraging membership in Lumber and Sawmill Workers Local Union No. 3, and encouraging membership in Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union, Local No. 2532, the respond- ent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (3) of the Act. 6. By interfering with, restraining, and coercing its employees in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in Section 7 of the Act, the 7e National Labor Relations Board v. National Motor Bearing Company , 105 F. (2d) 652 (C. C. A. 9th) ; of. National Labor Relations Board Y. Stackpole Carbon Company, 105 F. (2) 167 (C. C. A. 3d) ; cert. den'd 308 U. S. 605. WEST ORE'GO'N LUMBER COMPANY 75 respondent has engaged in and is engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of Section 8 (1) of the Act. 7. The aforesaid labor practices are unfair labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Act. ORDER Upon the basis of the above findings of fact and conclusions of law, and pursuant to Section 10 (c) of the National Labor Relations Act, the National Labor Relations Board hereby orders that the respondent, West Oregon Lumber Company, and its officers, agents,. successors, and assigns shall: 1. Cease and desist from : (a) Discouraging membership in Lumber and Sawmill Workers Local Union No. 3, or any other labor organization of its employees, or encouraging membership in Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union, Local No. 2532, or any other labor organization of its employees, by discharging, laying off, or refusing to reinstate any of its em- ployees, or in any other manner discriminating in regard to hire or. tenure of employment or any term or condition of employment; (b) Giving effect to any agreement which it may have entered into with Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union, Local No. 2532, in respect to rates of pay, wages, hours of employment, or other condi- tions of work, or recognizing Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union, Local No. 2532, as the exclusive representative of its employees unless and until Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union, Local No. 2532, is certified as such exclusive representative by the Board ; (c) Refusing to bargain collectively with Lumber and Sawmill Workers Local Union No. 3, as the exclusive representative of all of its plant and production employees, including foremen but excluding office employees and supervisory employees above the rank of fore- men in respect to rates of pay, wages, hours of employment, and other conditions of employment; (d) In any other manner interfering with, restraining, or coercing its employees in the exercise of their right to self-organization, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in concerted activities for the purposes of collective bargaining or other mutual aid and protection, as guaranteed in Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act. 2. Take the following affirmative action which the Board finds will effectuate the policies of the Act: (a) Offer to the employees named in Appendix "B" immediate and full reinstatement to their former or substantially equivalent positions, without prejudice to their seniority and other rights and privileges, such offer to be effected in the following manner : The '76 DECISIONS OF NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD number of persons hired after March 18, whose dismissal may be required to provide such immediate reinstatement, shall be dismissed. If, despite such discharges, there is not by reason of a reduction in the force of employees needed, sufficient employment immediately available for the remaining employees, including the employees named in Appendix "B," all available positions shall be distributed among such remaining employees in accordance with the respondent's usual method of reducing its force, without discrimination against any employee because of his union affiliation or activities, following a system of seniority to such extent as has her been applied in the conduct of the respondent's business. Those employees remain- ing after such distribution, for whom no employment is immediately available, shall be placed upon a preferential list prepared in accord- ance with the principles set forth in the previous sentence and shall, thereafter, in accordance with such list, be offered employment as it becomes available and before other persons are hired for such work ; (b) Make whole the employees named in Appendix "A" and Appendix "B" and the other employees employed on March 18, 1938, for any losses of pay they may have suffered by reason of the re- spondent's unlawful shut-down on March 18, 1938, by payment to .each of them respectively of a sum of money equal to that which -each would normally have earned as wages during the 5 working -days beginning March 18, 1938, less his net earnings," if any, during said period; provided that the respondent shall deduct from the back pay due each employee a sum equal to that received by such employee for work clone in Federal, State, county, municipal, or other relief project during the period for which back pay is due him under this 'Order, and shall pay any such amount deducted to the appropriate fiscal agency of the government financing such relief project; (c) Make whole the employees named in Appendix "A" and Ap- pendix "B" for any losses of pay they may have suffered by reason -of the respondent's discrimination in regard to their hire and tenure .and terms and conditions of employment, by payment to each of them respectively of a sum of money equal to that which each would normally have earned as wages during the period from the date of the discrimination to the date of the offer of reinstatement, less his net earnings," if any, during said period, had the respondent not -discriminated in regard to his hire and tenure and terms and condi- tions of employment; provided that the respondent shall deduct from the back pay due each employee a sum equal to that received by such employee for work done in Federal, State, county, municipal, or .other relief project during the period for which back pay is due him 17 See footnote 72, supra. WEST OREGON LUMBER COMPANY 77 under this Order, and shall pay any such amount deducted to the appropriate fiscal agency of the government financing such relief project ; (d) Upon request, bargain collectively with Lumber and Sawmill Workers Local Union No. 3, as the exclusive representative of all of its plant and production employees, including foremen, but excluding office employees and supervisory employees above the rank of foremen in respect to rates of pay, wages, hours of employment, and other conditions of employment; (e) Post immediately and in conspicuous places in each department of the respondent's plant notices stating that the respondent will cease and desist in the manner set forth in 1 (a), (b), (c), and (d) and that it will take the affirmative action set forth in 2 (a), (b), (c), and (cl) of this Order, and maintain said notices for a period of at least sixty (60) consecutive days from the date of posting; (f) Notify the Regional Director of the Nineteenth Region in writing within ten (10) days from the date of this Order what steps the respondent has taken to comply herewith. AND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the petition of Lumber and Saw- mill Workers Union, Local No. 2532, for an investigation and certifi- cation of representatives and the allegations of the complaint as to discrimination against the employees named in Appendix "C?' upon and after the reopening of the plant in April 1938 be, and they hereby are, dismissed. APPENDIX "A" Tom Arai R. L. Bell C. L. Broome Vito Demarinis Sam Dragovich Gordon Evjen Koshiro Hammamura Otis Hilkev Don (Yoshiomi) Hashiguchi Joe Ilias Earl Johnson Ti Kasahara Tony Kitrina Fred I. Kokubu William Kuehn Mike Kovach Rene J. Lorette George R. Moore Jiachi Shirota Kunimitsu Shori Kinichi Suzuki William F. Theis APPENDIX "B" Tohei Asanuma E. F. Bennett Maurice Bertram Joe Bertucci Daryl Calloway William F. Carley Louis Chapo Roy Colglazier John Desimini Max Dil]ey 78 DECISIONS OF Ryoheie Fukuyama Joseph Gerritsen L. C. Goodwin John Hamlin Saki Hokamura Kohachi Itoama, George Jacobs Leslie James H. W. Judd Frank W. Leasia Frank Lindahl Gustaf Ljungland Frank C . Lucker Howard Mangum F. G. Anderson H. E. Clark J. C. Durgin M. Hobigal ( Hobizal) W. Hoffman J. Houseman H. Koike NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD R. T. Marion Frank Murazen C. E. Nordyke Yoshisuke Oba P. E. Penman Randall Perkins F. B. Robertson Frank Russell G. L. Smith Henry Snider Richard Symons William Violette Richard Wall APPENDIX "C" E. Lingle W. Lomnicky C. Mack D. Park R. L. Sims E. Somnerfelt R. Ward MR. WII.LIAM M. LEISEasox took no part in the consideration of the above Decision and Order. Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation